by I_Like_Plants » Mon 04 Jul 2005, 20:40:42
I read somewhere that people who come from a background of privation to the US tend to jump onto the consumer treadmill most enthusiastically. Observations bear this out, from the Russian refugees and Cuban refugees who are most adamant about "The American Way Of Life" (tm) to people I see around here from India and China, who drive new cars, buy their kids every concievable toy and game and gadget.
I came from a background of scrimping and saving and all that, and as soon as I was able to I got as nice a car as I could, etc. I'll admit I have, in the past, done things like buy a "BMW" sweater at the BMW dealership and wear it in public, spend $3000-odd on furniture that I ended up literally giving away when I moved, and most recently, bought a new SUV that I ended up hating, hating the loan, the thing's impact on the environment, my not getting exercise, how it was big and bulky and not fun to drive, etc. I got rid of it recently. I honestly think the underlying reason I got the thing was to prove I could get it.
I have lived on $500 a month, and even less, and looking back I had little worries. My job sucked but at that rate of pay I could have gotten anything else if I wanted. I saved up money, lived within my means, and didn't realize that in strange, anti-american places and cultures this is a good thing. Most importantly, in the culture we're going to all be living in soon.
Right now we have a whole 3rd world, and 2nd world that I lived in (part of which are in the US just not talked about) who feel that a big house, big car, and consuming as much as possible are Heaven. The brainwashing is VERY strong.
There are people who believe in consuming less. Some Americans, very very few, vanishingly so, I think I've met one, maybe two, who believe this. Europeans much more so, because they tend to have a different belief system. I've met far more Europeans than fellow Americans who believe that consuming less is vistuous. Japanese who believe in the traditional values, First Nations people in the US and Canada, other odd groups who have managed to either avoid, not be noticed by, or through extreme strength of resolve, resist the consumerism behemoth.
Here's the problem. As long as Americans are consuming like crazy, people all over the world, and even the poor within America, are going to feel like they're failures if they're not doing the same. And the result is pure worst-case scenario. Ecocide.
We in the "First World" need to lead by example. 1% of us, doing it and doing it successfully and publicizing it well, with blogs, web pages, books, etc., are enough to do it. There are people in the US doing it already, living at least fairly sustainably, but it's something like .01%.
I had no idea that when I was living on $500 or $600 a month take home pay, and saving 10%-15% of it each month, that I was more of a success than if I'd accomplished my dream at the time, working for one of the big corporations and living in the "right" suburb. If I'd known, I'd have stayed right where I was, and worked toward being even less of a "consumer". I just had no idea. The .01% doing it were not enough of a "critical mass" of people living that lifestyle for it to get through to me and, as far as I could tell, the other working poor around me, who all had as their ultimate dream working for a big corp. and living in the suburbs too. But 1% might have done it. 10% will really do it. And Mother Nature's going to make sure 100% of us are doing it pretty soon.