Great post. Some thoughts…
we are disconnected to the physical form of communication. There's tons of studies on the importance of physical connection — Christoffer
Yes— and it’s just obvious from experience.
We're blasted by information in our alone time, and the information is "dead". — Christoffer
It’s dead from lack of physical communication as you mention, but also dead in the sense that we’ve become desensitized to information. We now have knowledge and information of all kinds at our fingertips, while walking in the woods, and we’re less knowledgeable and less informed (and more confused, distracted, divided) than ever.
So it’s a problem of abundance as well. But one more supplemental point: even books are removed from the person writing it. Books never substituted for conversation in real time, but I wouldn’t say they were dead. What’s truly “dead,” and I think we all can feel, is reading and communicating through screens. Reading a book in the real world versus online is a very different experience. The former I consider alive, the latter rather dead. I’m exaggerating, but there’s something to it. Reading a book online is simply different— whether it’s the light from the screen or whatever, the experience is cheapened. At least for me.
Together with the focus on individuality, the neoliberal ideology of the self, it has skewed the perspective people have of their ego. — Christoffer
One important aspect of a general assault on the majority of mankind. The elites have the power and want to keep that power. They know the only real power the masses have are their numbers.
Undermining a sense of community, solidarity, and the common good are all necessary. Keep everyone as divided, alone, apathetic and passive as possible. The emphasis on individual consumption is therefore an important piece. Destroying unions is another. Infiltrating the education system is another and, of course, owning and controlling the media — of which social media is another piece (owned by major multinational corporations).
What we need more today than ever is social groups not just meeting, but building something together within the physical realm. A step back from the individual perspective, the focus on the ego and into a collective realm in which social groups build something together. — Christoffer
Yes— and it has to be in the real world. It cannot be on a Facebook group. It’s too easy and cheap. People have to show up. There’s other prerequisites too: awareness, some education, the ability to listen, and some control of emotions. But schools and parents and media fail at cultivating these attributes, based on deliberate decisions years ago — so this itself is a challenge. If people are tired, financially insecure, indebted, busy, addicted to technology and never educated on any of it, it’s no wonder of the percentage of people even interested in politics, less than 5% do anything more than slacktivism. It’s all by design, really. In the sense that none of it is an accident.
the decline in spirituality and religion has created a void in the larger collective sense. — Christoffer
Yes — and there’s been nothing to replace it. We have science and capitalism. That’s it. It’s material gain and material existence. It’s not fair to “blame” science for this as the creationist-type people like to do, but there’s something to it. Even if we believe science — whatever it is — has stumbled on the ultimate and infinite truth, it may well be worth implementing something like Plato’s noble lies, just for the health and betterment of society.
One such project, I would say, is building a new form of living that mitigates climate change. — Christoffer
A big one, yes. It’s good to have a problem and a goal, to be problem-solving with others. Nuclear weapons is another one. We have problems never faced in human history. Wars and famines have always existed, at least going back 10,000 years or so, but nuclear weapons and 420 ppm of CO2? Man…