by Wildwell » Mon 07 Feb 2005, 22:03:08
Its starts off with the education system: The education system is entirely based on serving the needs of the military and/or business. Aspiration values start very young; babies and young children are given gifts that are later expected. Christmas is mainly about a commercial and childhood opportunity and parent’s bank balances. As the child gets older, she or he is told to aspire to be the best, make the best of their talents and rise to their highest station. They are taught to consider themselves important and study subjects which expand the ego. By the time they are twelve they are certain of ‘me’ and his automatic rights. Privileges few have ever had to really work at, previously earned and fought for by ancestors through hardship, revolution and war. By the time they are in their teens, instead of civil responsibility and self sufficiency; subjects like media and business are taught. Constant images of wealth in advertising, TV, film and in tabloid newspapers bombard them serving the corporate strategy of distant faceless boardroom executives, also brought up in the same system. The aspiration now is to learn to drive and get married and reproduce, anything else is considered a failure. People respect those that earn money and disrespect those that don’t, even though they are serving essential needs. Judgements are perception boxed by arguments serving the system and the self. Some things are cool? But nobody stops to ponder the real reasons or the rationale. All of which depends the images, perceptions and qualities that work to pre-defined and well tested strategy. Some is assumed art, the value of which is never discussed. Merely the pattern of 35mm film - juxtaposed elegantly and symbolically to represent deep seated values of self and society through coded norms, humour, stylised for deliberate detachment yet ultimately enslaving the recipient in its values and fashion. Carrying on, ever forward, until the next generation is born onto a small planet only a handful have ever left, yet feels so normal despite being in a vast empty loneliness, which no one will ever know where it started or will end, or its true nature, values or purpose.
In short it’s the system. Dr Al Bartletts lecture is an absolute must see, as it illustrates our system with clarity and insight. Despite my deliberate one sided description of it, most people aspire to raise their station. A few aspire to do selfless good or have humble existences, but they find they are fighting the system. Peak oil is an example where you have vested interests that don’t want to change and will defend their assumed rights until the very end because of these patterns.
Last edited by
Wildwell on Mon 07 Feb 2005, 22:08:27, edited 1 time in total.