Last night I was lying in bed trying to get to sleep, and as is
typical when trying to clear my mind I instead was assaulted by a swarm
of loosely-connected tangential thoughts. I won't get into the
whole sequence, but somewhere down the line I recalled a
discussion with a friend of mine at the post office a few days ago that
focused around the fallacy of neoliberalism. This led me to conceive an
editorial cartoon, which I may yet draw, of a steam train, with the
tender full of public money and the engineer (a government worker if
you're feeling cynical) shovelling it into the insatiable furnace of
corporate interest.
"But wait!" I already heard the critics cry, "Isn't that powering the
engine? Aren't we going somewhere?" And then I started
pondering what metaphors the passenger cars could represent, and at that
point the vision mutated into an analogy once used in a discussion of
F.A. Hayek's conceptualization of freedom as absence of coercion secured
through private property, which soon enough turned into a debate about
his neoliberal economic philosophy. The trickle-down theory that so
enamoured Reagan et al. was propagated as a passenger train on the move,
the first-class compartments occupied by the monied elite and their
political counterparts, whose exorbitant wealth would roll down the
aisles to the less-opportune passengers. (I was already scratching my
head when I first heard the scenario, too.) According to this setup,
there would always be class difference, but to bring the train to a halt
and redistribute the wealth was dismissed as an unnecessary, indeed
harmful, interruption. (I'm thinking the train was trying not to arrive
late for the next G-8 summit.)
"Hold on a minute," I thought, in one of the precious few 'eureka'
moments of my life, "We've neglected a very important question: Where,
exactly, is this train heading?"
I'm certainly no anprim, but at the same time I find the old adage "you
can't stop progress" a weak excuse for lack of will to seriously
confront the ethical questions of advance for advancement's sake.
Without getting into the wealth of literature I've read on the subject
(since to properly explain it all I'll need multiple journals), the
continued defence of free market capitalism, despite the legacy of
Africa, South America, the Russian crisis and the 2008 crash (to name
but a select few) calls to mind the definition of insanity as repeating
the same action and expecting a different result. Progress gave us
penicillin. Progress also gave us Mutually Assured Destruction. Progress
landed us on the moon. Progress nearly annihilated the indigenous
Americans. In my cartoon, the progress train, the engine indifferent and
the engineer unwatching, thunders over the edge of a cliff.
But just like my jumbled stream of consciousness last night, let's now
veer away from that most deplorable of pseudo-sciences, economics, and
talk about what the kids these days really care about: social
media. Or rather, what the erosion of any concept of privacy of
information means for today's society. Over at CivFanatics in one of the
threads on Snowden, one of our European forumers commented on the
curious tendency of Americans to take up arms against mere rumours of
government snooping, yet willingly divulge tomes of personal data to
corporations. Some (read: very little) of it is
consensual, thanks in large part to arbitrary policy changes (Facebook)
or gradual erosion (Google's original terms of service promised never to
record any personal information; this draft does not
appear in its official archives). The result is aggregate data
leagues beyond what the CIA or FBI or NSA have collected by
themselves. And unlike a totalitarian state, which one assumes is at
least mining data to secure its own interests, the first and last reason
corporations collect this information is to sell it. Snowden only grazed the tip of the
iceberg.
How did it get this way? In large part, public apathy. I was fiercely
opposed to Internet-based DRM from day one, which I considered
intolerably intrusive, and routinely balk at gaming journalists'
pronouncements that the model is here to stay. When it comes to
draconian DRM, Xbox Live and Ubisoft routinely shoot themselves in the
foot and are rightly criticized; yet despite Steam being a more benign
platform, are we really willing to roll over and accept this system as
the new industry standard simply because it's not as bad as it
could be? Next time you encounter a Terms of Service form or
are listening to the latest news about some government surveillance
programme, ask yourself: Is this really the sort of progress we want?
Progressive tautology by @Thorvald (El Thorvaldo)
Snowpiercer, anyone?
Published as a DeviantArt journal August 2013, this piece is a good example of why I preferred to file my spontaneous op-eds separate from formal literature: I touch on a lot of topics in very little space, perhaps provoking more questions than I actually answer. :P
(The original text used 'luddite' in place of 'anprim', but then I thought, "No, Ned was right.")
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