The "Economy" Must Die

2
groks

The Aztecs engaged in the practice of sacrificing humans to the Sun god. Most people today would consider this barbaric, but the Aztecs had nothing on us. At least the Sun is real, and necessary to all life on this planet. We practice human sacrifice also. The "god" to which we offer up our victims is called the "economy". In contrast to the Sun god, the "economy" is an invented abstraction. When it comes to scale of carnage the Aztecs again, lag far behind. Consider the thousands who starve to death daily for want of little pieces of paper and metal, worth nothing but what we believe they are worth. And let's not forget all the other sacrificial victims who have perished in banker-engineered wars. How could the "economy" have survived without them? Then there are those who for various reasons, are not economically productive. They are kicked to the gutter, considered human garbage. We treat murderers better than that. I guarantee you that, if and when, some future civilisation unearths the debris of our own, they will conclude that the "economy" was our god. How embarrassing. How shameful!
If you look up the word "economy" in the dictionary, it simply means "management of resources". In this sense there is nothing wrong with it. In practice, and as commonly used, it means something else: the monetary economy. Henceforth, when I use the word, it will be in this modern, perverted sense.
Every time I hear the mainstream media, or anybody else, talk about saving the economy, I feel like I'm going to hurl. Why should we want to save it? It's sick. What has it done for us, that we should want to save it? It has turned us into slaves and whores. It has robbed us of our freedom and our self-respect. It has turned this beautiful, bountiful planet into a prison with paper bars. How do we not see this? Could it be that we are members of a mind-control cult so pervasive as to be invisible? It certainly has all the characteristics of a cult, including myths, dogmatic unquestioning belief, and vicious punishment of heretics. There is no shame in having been brain-washed, only in consciously choosing to remain so. Let's examine the mythology, and see if it holds up.
Myth #1: The economy is an efficient means of managing resources.
No, it isn't. The economy thrives on waste. Planned obsolescence is an obvious example. It is not economically profitable to make things that last. The economy demands that "goods" be produced as cheaply as possible and last a very short time so as to keep "consumers" consuming and feed the profit machine. Another example of this fallacy is "manufactured want". Goods are produced that no one really has any use for, then we waste human time and creativity on advertising to make people want them. The economy is incredibly wasteful of human energy. Most of the work that people do, doesn't need doing. "Primitive" societies that lack our labour-saving technologies, devote far less time to work that we do. It is sad to see brilliant creative people, who would love to share their gifts, working as tele-marketers and factory slaves.
Myth #2: The economy is the driver of innovation and progress.
Wrong again. These things are the result of human creativity and curiosity. The economy has interfered with progress whenever it has threatened vested interests. There is no need for us to still be using fossil fuels, for example. Free energy technology exists, but is not made available because it is free. Likewise, medical advances are suppressed to protect the profits of the pharmaceutical industry. Up-to-date discoveries in the fields of physics and biology are not mentioned in grade-school science classes. This is not because they are hard to understand, but because their paradigm-shattering implications threaten vested interests. Need I go on? Another way that the economy has hurt progress is by making us stupid. The brain develops as it is used. Survival needs are taken care of by the R-complex, the reptilian brain. This is it's oldest and least evolved part. The economy, through it's insistence that everyone (except the elite) earn the right to exist, causes us to overuse this part of the brain. Scientific research has shown that a foetus whose mother experiences survival anxiety develops an enlarged R-complex and a shrunken prefrontal cortex. I suspect this is the explanation for social conditions in areas where poverty is most prevalent. In our modern technological society, we have the means to sustainably feed, house and educate everyone on this planet. The only reason we don't is because it would hurt the economy. If people didn't have to worry about surviving, who would staff the third world sweat-shops?
Myth #3: Economic growth will lead to greater prosperity for all.
Um, no. Within the economy, the more scarce something is (including money), the more valuable. That is called "supply and demand". These are presented as natural forces. They're not. In order to maximise profit, both are manipulated. "Surplus" food-stuffs are dumped rather than distributed in order to keep prices high. Through advertising, wants are created (where none existed) in order to increase demand. In Vancouver, at least 15% of housing sits empty because it is "investment property" while hundreds are homeless. Low unemployment leads to inflation, so it is deliberately maintained at a level that suits the hoarders of capital. This level is called the NAIRU (non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment) by economists. This is the reason central banks raise and lower interest rates. There must be losers as well as winners so the rats will keep running, faster and faster. Also, because of the pyramidal structure of the economy, there must be a lot more losers than winners.
Myth #4: The economy is the best/only way of organising society.
Not so. Society is organised through communication. If money were to disappear tomorrow, we would not suddenly forget how to speak and write. People would still be capable of organising for common purpose. Everything that wants and needs doing would still get done. People are naturally social and cooperative. Most of us want to contribute something for the benefit of others. The challenge would not be in getting things done but in finding ways to occupy ourselves once all the unnecessary labour ends. Those who are not able to be "productive" do not represent a burden to anyone but rather an opportunity for caring and generosity. "Organising", in this context, really means managing (as in slaves or livestock). It means forcing others to do what they would otherwise refuse to do.
Myth #5: Money is simply a means of facilitating exchange. It reflects intrinsic value.
I was curious about how and why money came to exist. I assumed, as do most people, that it evolved to expedite trade. When I did some research, I discovered that it was actually created for the purpose of paying tribute. It allowed the rulers to amass and store more wealth than they could in a grain-based economy. In other words, it was created to facilitate hoarding by the wealthy and powerful. This is still it's primary purpose. If money reflected intrinsic value, goods and services would be traded for those of equal value. If this were the case, there would be no such thing as "profit". Profit is the result of fraudulently or coercively trading something of lesser for something of higher value. Profit is theft. It should hardly need stating that not everything with value can be commodified. This obvious fact is increasingly sneared at or overlooked.
Myth #6: Economic activity = democracy = freedom.
This is a particularly nasty lie, as it plays on noble instincts to deliver just the opposite. The economy does not promote democracy (as officially defined, "government of the people for the people"). It concentrates power in the hands of the very few. When was the last time your government defended the interests of the people over those of the elite? Exactly. This is not the result of corruption, but the result intended from the beginning. The monetary economy was invented by the rulers to control the ruled. I have deliberately chosen not to make a distinction between capitalism and communism, since both are monetary economic systems and both are coercive and enslaving. One is secretly, and the other openly so. That is the only real difference. This false polarity has proved very useful for the controllers, since we would all prefer to believe we are free. This also allows for circumscribed debate, which never addresses the real issues.
To return to the Aztec parallel, it should be pointed out that most of those people believed that what they were doing was right and necessary. Their priests and rulers told them so. When the promised results failed to materialise, their solution was... more of the same. Some of them must have known that what they were doing was cruel and insane but they didn't see any alternative. Sound familiar? This brought about the end of their civilisation. Somebody should have said something.
There are alternatives to the monetary economy. The natives of this region (Pacific North-West) had a gift economy until it was outlawed by the European colonialists. The movie, Zeitgeist Addendum proposes a resource based economy. There are other possibilities as well. Actually, almost everyone has had the experience of a non-monetary economy. We call it "the family". What will be fundamentally required is awareness, vision, maturity and cooperation. It's going to be up to us. We will have to trust each other and ourselves. The psychopaths who are running the show don't want to change. The first thing we need to do is wake up and stop supporting the insanity. The rest might be easier that we think.

Note: This essay might seem to include excessive use of quotation marks. In many cases I am employing them to indicate abuse of language. This is one of the hall-marks of mind-control, that words and phrases are used in ways that reverse or pervert their proper meaning.

Comments

the end of the economy

great blog!

"Any economic or social system that does not benefit the natural communities on which it is based is unsustainable, immoral, and stupid. Sustainability, morality, and intelligence (as well as justice) requires the dismantling of any such economic or social system, or at the very least disallowing it from damaging your landbase." - derrick jensen, from Endgame
http://www.endgamethebook.org/Excerpts/1-Premises.htm

check out "The Hamlet Economy"

Envisioning a Hamlet Economy: Topology of Sustainability and Fulfilled Ontogeny - http://www.jeffvail.net/2006/04/envisioning-hamlet-economy-topology-of.h...

"The goal of this post is to outline a concrete framework for establishing a new economy based on rhizome structure that provides negative feedback against encroaching hierarchy, that ensures environmental sustainability, and that maximizes its compatibility with human ontogeny. I will first outline my approach to the problem, then look at one historical example—how the lattice network of Tuscan hill towns created a topology that addressed its unique circumstances, then analyze the optimal theoretical topology of a modern rhizome economy, and finally discuss some real-world concerns for the conscious design and establishment of a new hamlet economy."

"In this model, I have placed the threshold of self-sufficiency at the familial group level. This threshold leverages the existing, biological human tendencies toward kinship, and creates a basic rhizome node that consists of roughly 10-40 people, or about 4 extended, nuclear family units."

social systems will have to adjust to the realities of 21st century life on a hot, crowded, and angry planet. the leaps may seem tremendous right now but they will be forced within the coming decades as peak oil, resource conflict, and environmental collapse kick in even further.

Award?

This needs an award of some type and iv only read the first paragraph! Definitely will finish reading this as soon as i wake up tomorrow.
From Laziness to patience to patients to patents

yes

this is the kind of thinking we need. thank you

Hallelujah!

Give us one hundred men and women like her and we’ll finish this thing right now. =)

"Sanity is Madness put to good use.  Waking life is a dream controlled." -George Santayana

Don't Play!

Don't play! lol Lets start a petition and get this thing going right now! ;)

A normal person either believes or doesn't believe, a warrior HAS to believe. This is the greatest fear to the unprepared but the only sanctuary for the wise.
From Laziness to patience to patients to patents

yeah! and we should take all

yeah! and we should take all our polluting cars outside the city and sacrifice them! i think that makes sense.

Hard work

Its hard work because how would be get to work?How could we survive without are dear cars...I don't know but i have up my car long ago along with crazy money system. Am i the only one who believes in giving away without asking for anything in return? Any one want a free guitar?

From Laziness to patience to patients to patents

I concurr

Splendid.

Thanks

Thank you all for your encouraging words. I really appreciate being part of a community where sanity can prevail. On a symbolic level, I see cars (particularly in their function of commuter transport) as reflecting the isolation and irresponsibilty of the false ego. As we begin to create a real civilisation, I expect we'll see a lot less of them.

The god to whom we sacrifice

The god to whom we sacrifice humans is named Choice. Imagine what future generations will think. Talk about the irresponsibility of the false ego!

Lesson of The Great

Lesson of The Great Depression

The machines stand patiently
ready to act on human command.
Workers expectantly arise
to resume their duties.
Tools, systems, routes, logistics
lined up for service.
Plants to sow and reap; structures
to build, maintain, repair, replace;
commodities to be united with
their markets; music to be played;
enchanting murals to paint;
shows that must go on; coffee
to be made; errands to run;
endless activities and professions
imposing order on entropy.
Teach the curious,
heal the sick or broken,
enforce the law,
tend to the poor.
Society's capillaries clogged by
a powerful voodoo. All is
needing to be done, but stopped
dead or cancerously
receding from living
for want of the magic beans,
the mysterious force of money,
a social construct gone mad,
constricting the flow of life.

(c) July 8, 2008 Laurie Corzett/libramoon

http://emergingvisions.blogspot.com

I hope you don't mind that I

I hope you don't mind that I have forwarded this article to the Seers and Seekers Yahoo group

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/seerseeker/

http://emergingvisions.blogspot.com

EXCELLENT POST!!

Thanks for so quickly and intelligently debunking those myths about our current economic system, that is extremely valuable and important info. As for a post-crazy/destructive/exploitative/oppressive economy, here is something I posted as a comment on another related post (http://evolver.net/group/evolver_worldwide/discussion/how_are_you_prepar...), but I think fits here too, just add clean local energy, ecovillages and bikes :)

I believe all of our economic hardship, through dependency on corporations and upper class land owners for the basic necessities of life, should be looked at through karmic lenses. By participating in a system that produces so much pollution/destruction, exploitation and oppression perhaps having that fragile dependency cut, or at least greatly (and harshly) reduced, is what we need in order to understand how far from a Natural way of living we've come to. Business as usual is unsustainable and is against core ideals like personal freedom, good health, social-justice, equality, etc.
And since it ultimately comes down to access to the land, since the Earth is the source of all of our necessities, practically this means land-reform (as done in Kerala, India and with the Landless Workers movement in Brazil) along with zero-interest government loans for lower-class land ownership, living in the healthiest & most sustainable way, which concerning the basic necessities means small-scale veganic gardening/farming, green building, and use of composting/humanure (it was meant to help grow our food, not be sent to treatment plants using scarce fresh water!), seed-saving, preserving... The more you look into the facts of human physiology and ecology the more veganic is seen to be the solution, enslaving and killing animals unnecessarily is probably the most karmicly devastating practice that we ignorantly participate in due to the environmental & physical harm it causes, in order to get back to a relationship with Divintiy/Nature (back to the Garden) this appears to be a necessity, so the quicker this is realized by the masses the better.
So a combination of a social/economic justice movement along with the personal life changes of living in a much simpler (less consumption/material possessions) and less harmful way (veganic diet) appears to be the most effective path for us right now.
Peace

How To Save The World (link)

I just came across this and thought it's a good addition to this discussion,
7 changes that make a lot of sense:
http://www.tytingcommunityproject.org.uk/howtosavetheworld/

A very interesting blog

A very interesting blog. I also enjoy the comment in the reply lines. I love to see people thinking like this, it gives me a hopeful glow. I suppose my reply is just an elaboration on your original ideas.

Yes, "primitives" definitely saw their gods differently than we see them. They invented them in order to put them to death, and they drew their energy from this sacrifice. With the Aztecs the gods died in order to give birth to the sun, moon and people. The insight: in order for something to come alive, to incarnate as a god, it must first be put to death. This may give us insights into the consumer economy...

Reply to Myth #1: I agree with you, "the economy thrives on waste." How is this waste a god? How does this planned obsolescence conceal a more primitive urge? This is what Bataille talked about when he spoke of "expenditure" and "accursed share." He studied the Aztecs. It is the excessive that is essential; that is to say, where the energy of the society is fomented. Bataille's notion: there is always too much for everyone, excess was our destiny. This puts us in a precarious position, a position of a devastating energy - devastating because we are destroying everything and most do not retain the wisdom enough to halt their actions. Let us entertain the notion that thriving on waste goes deeper into the ideology of the modern mind than we'd like to think. I am reminded of Marx's notion of the commodity fetish: observing the primitive societies he claims that modern people invest into the object its own magical or god-like qualities, thus the term "commodity fetish" - fetish in the sense of Eliade's religious fetish.

Let us observe this "god" of the economy in light of Bataille's "accursed share." Modernism was a society of production, its clarion call was "economy." Whereas the Postmodern has been described as a society of consumption. In the Postmodern this commodity fetish unfolds into the urge of putting commodities to death, the society of expenditure. We consume "economy." In this context, we too put our gods to death. Consumer society absolutely worships the death of objects. Just as we put to death massed-consumed objects, so too we put the economy to death in the concept of expenditure. Now I agree with you and don't like the economy either, but because of this "accursed share" insight I cannot say "death to the economy" because moderns are more like the Aztecs than we think - the god of economy is put to death everyday. Perhaps we need a different word to express our repugnance?

Reply to Myth #2: I agree that there is a myth about the economy as the driver of innovation and progress. I agree that those things are the result of creativity and curiosity, but one must remember that the introduction of "economy" into the historical constellation has much to do with progress and modernity. The drive behind Modernism is Economy, who has at its heart of hearts the myth of innovation and progress. You cannot untie these two things from one another. In the context of Modernity the Economy is progress. You cannot get rid of Economy and still have progress - progress is at the heart of Modernity. I am not siding with Economy, nor with progress and Modernity, but I just think we shouldn't be fooling ourselves about the fastened bond those three ideologies have to one another. Moreover, we shouldn't be hoping for "progress with a human face," that is just as naive as "Socialism with a human face" or "Capitalism with a human face."

Reply to Myth #3: I agree that within Economy the more scarce something is the more valuable. We should here be shining a light on Capitalism as such - Marx likened Capitalism to a vampire for a reason. "Capitalism loves crisis," says Slavoj Zizek. That is why Capitalism loves the Ecology movement and has almost recuperated it completely, paralyzing its political dimension in the pursuit of purchasing power - "you too can save the planet through *buying* green products." Obviously very ideological.

Reply to Myth #4: You are right to expose the myth that the economy is the best/only way of organizing society. This is a myth of Modernity, and one that is being exposed for the lie that it is. But how else shall we organize it, and furthermore what is the ideology of "organization?"

You are right to say society is organized through communication. I think you are getting at something when you mention money as the key ingredient to social organization around the economic, however, I think you miss the notion of "exchange values" and how the economy has slipped in between every mode of communication today (at least mass-communication, and something along these lines can also be said about face to face communication as well) . Money is an abstraction based on nothing but an illusion of wealth, just as today communication is based on the illusion of the symbolic. Communication has become like money, it has become a mere sign. There is no longer symbolic exchanges, only exchange for the sake of information: we treat communication as a commodity. This is a problem if we are to pull out of a society organized around the economic.

How to empower a profound symbolic communication? That is the task. Like the retreating army we may have to destroy our own fields to keep them from falling into the enemies hands. Like Nietzsche, we may have to push over what is already falling.

Reply to Myth #5: You are correct to expose the lie of "Money." I am reminded how in Medieval Japan their currency was rice, and how the farmers who grew the rice couldn't eat it, but had to grow it and give it to the landlord for tribute. That is a perfect example of what you are saying when you mention, "It allowed the rulers to amass and store more wealth...created to facilitate hoarding by the wealthy and powerful." Money is not based on anything of concrete value (gold or silver, etc...) more so than it is off of the blind belief that it works for something. And money is increasingly becoming mere numbers in a virtual network, put on plastic cards...an entire system of fraduence so clever as to amass its power to technological prowess. Theft aided by technology.

Reply to Myth #6: Economic activity = democracy = freedom. I agree, "the economy does not promote democracy......It concentrates power in the hands of the very few." I would only add to this by saying that what we can expect in America for "We the People" is becoming more and more the "Asian model" of Capitalism. You are correct to say "Capitalism and communism...are monetary economic systems and both are coercive and enslaving." The ideology that used to keep these two hegemonic systems apart is slowly coming unraveled as they join forces. It brings me a cynical point where I say that we have never had Democracy; what American thinks is Democracy has always been a reflective spectacle, an illusion of choice between two "brands" (not unlike Pepsi and Coke) already chosen by the ruling oligarchy. The problem today resides in the notion that even this "Democracy for the sake of appearances" is being unraveled, and with no reservations from the ruling powers. Economy is increasingly adopting the totalitarian model. If you want to look for the future of American look at the China system: Capitalism without Democracy. Let us rememeber, however, that once these two isms join forces they should not be called by their original names, that the system deserves the heading National Socialism - Fascism has always been the saving power of the ruling elite of Capitalist Economy. Which should point to the inherent flaws in Capitalism as such: "when was the last time your government defended the interests of the people over those of the elite? Exactly."

www.iaeruo.net

just concurring

I agree with everyone else - this is great stuff - take it on the road!

Medowa!

That's what my baby says when he really digs something. But really loud like this, "Me DOW wa!!!"

This definitely gets a medowa. I am going to do a fucking cartwheel for you, which I am much too fat to pull off in my tiny living room. But I swear to god....I just did it.

You just got appointed treasurer of my new army. Will you accept? ;)

"With great power comes great responsibility." - Stan Lee (via Peter Parker)

Thanks, Meg.

"Medowa", that's so cute. Army? I'd be a strange sort of treasurer since I favour abolishing money altogether.

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