Mostly those (not only) "in the West" systemically not free (i.e. alienated by exploitation and/or discrimination) "want be free" – free themselves – from status quo 'systems of control' (re: hegemonic, neoliberal, military-police-prison-pharma-industrial complexes). Too many also do not "want" others to be(come) free either out of a paranoiac zerosum mindset or a deeply indoctrinated inferiority-complex for which some have militarized themselves & scapegoat others to overcompensate for their projected (self)fears-hatreds. Oligarchic 'divide & conquor' strategems are still working (aided & abetted by Stockholm syndromed, reactionary, populist mobs) and accelerating.Does anybody in the West still want to be free? — synthesis
Does anybody in the West still want to be free? — synthesis
As we devolve into a totalitarianism characterized by intolerance, divisiveness, and massive propaganda/ignorance, you just have to wonder whether the desire to be free has been selected out of Western people. — synthesis
No doubt a corollary of William Burrough's "junk equation" (à la Nietzsche's decadence, Adorno's culture industry, Arendt's banality, Deleuze-Guattari's desiring-machines, Chomsky-Herman's manufactured consensus or Žižek's ideology).It has often been suggested that the great lesson of the 20th century was that the most efficacious method of controlling populations was not through coercion ala the USSR, Nazi Germany, or Communist China, but instead, by giving people EXACTLY what they desire. — synthesis
Growing up in America, one kind of assumes that the default setting is that people (more than anything) desire to be free. I would imagine that most of us in the United States (and in the West) thought that everybody would want to live in a "free country" if they could. But maybe that's not really the case. Maybe most people are just as happy to live under a set of authoritarian edicts as long as they can have access to things like cheap junk food, lightening quick internet, 2-day free shipping, and free pornography, you know, the essentials of life.
As we devolve into a totalitarianism characterized by intolerance, divisiveness, and massive propaganda/ignorance, you just have to wonder whether the desire to be free has been selected out of Western people.
Does anybody in the West still want to be free? — synthesis
Could the schools get any worse? — synthesis
Does anybody in public life ever tell the truth anymore? — synthesis
Could political polarity be any worse? — synthesis
Could the fact that the health care system is corrupt beyond your wildest dreams be any more evident? — synthesis
One need not use Google or Facebook, whereas we see what happens if you do not comply with police or government. So I cannot see how these entities can be a source of any denials of freedom — NOS4A2
Freedom is no longer discussed by the sake of freedom, but for the sake of power. — Gus Lamarch
Could the schools get any worse?
— synthesis
Yes. There ARE good schools with good students getting a good education. These schools produce the next generation of cadre that the ruling class needs to keep society functioning in the desired manner. Maybe 20% of American students attend these (usually suburban) schools.
Yes, there are some fairly good schools left, and a lot of schools that have won the race to the bottom. That's OK because the students attending the crappy schools were never going to be very useful, anyway, except as consumers -- which they'll do well as. — Bitter Crank
Does anybody in public life ever tell the truth anymore?
— synthesis
Yes, Somebody, somewhere, is telling the truth in public. Why do you expect people in power to speak the truths that would probably result in their not being in power any more? — Bitter Crank
Could political polarity be any worse?
— synthesis
Oh yes, much worse. Think Germany in the 1920s-1930s. Bloody street fighting between Communists and Nazis was a regular and frequent occurrence. Go Reds, Smash State! The Communists as well as the less radical, centrist parties were brutally suppressed as soon as the Nazis took power in early 1933. The recent storming of the US capital building was very widely condemned by both sides of the shallow groove that marks the shallow political divide.
The US doesn't really have much polarity -- we are a unipolar political system, the two poles are both capitalist.
We could, we should have more polarity -- workers of the United States, Unite -- then revolt. We have a small amount to lose, and a lot more to gain. — Bitter Crank
Could the fact that the health care system is corrupt beyond your wildest dreams be any more evident?
— synthesis
Yes, the corruption could / should be much, much more evident than it is. — Bitter Crank
I would maintain that those going to the "good" school and are running the place are absolute idiots. I don't care if they aced every test since kindergarten, they are almost all fools. — synthesis
BC, what's with all this anti-capitalist bullshit? — synthesis
Yes, the corruption could / should be much, much more evident than it is.
— Bitter Crank
How is that possible? — synthesis
↪Nikolas Over the past years it has become apparent (to me) that man needs a higher, everlasting moral authority because depending on intellectualism to achieve the same results in what every other foray into intellectualism portends, birth, life, and death. — synthesis
As we devolve into a totalitarianism characterized by intolerance, divisiveness, and massive propaganda/ignorance, you just have to wonder whether the desire to be free has been selected out of Western people. — synthesis
Freedom is just a fancy word for nothing left to lose. — god must be atheist
Some ppl only learned who Picasso was when they read a news article that told of one of his paintings selling for a record umpteen-million dollars. Culture becomes important when it generates money. I doubt they ever learned who Diogenes was. — Todd Martin
I love it! I can't tell if it's bait or true. — FlaccidDoor
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