These are dark days in the United States: the cataclysmic stock-market declines, the industries edging up on bankruptcy, the home foreclosures and the waves of layoffs. But the prospect of an end to plenty has uncovered what may ultimately be a more pernicious problem, an addiction to consumption so out of control that it qualifies as a sickness. The suffocation of a store employee by a stampede of shoppers was horrifying, but it wasn't entirely surprising.Irresponsible use of credit got us here, so what's the government's solution?
But let's look, not at the numbers, but the atmospherics. Appliances, toys, clothes, gadgets. Junk. There's the sad truth. Wall Street executives may have made investments that lost their value, but, in a much smaller way, so did the rest of us. A person in the United States replaces a cell phone every 16 months, not because the cell phone is old, but because it is oldish.
Hard times offer the opportunity to ask hard questions, and one of them is the one my friend asked, staring at sweaters and shoes: why did we buy all this stuff? Did anyone really need a flat-screen in the bedroom, or a designer handbag, or three cars?
The drumbeat that accompanied Black Friday this year was that the numbers had to redeem us, that if enough money was spent by shoppers it would indicate that things were not so bad after all. But what the economy required was at odds with a necessary epiphany. Because things are dire, many people have become hesitant to spend money on trifles. And in the process they began to realize that it's all trifles.Rampant consumerism drives our economy, so to fix this mess we need to borrow, shop and spend more. This is where the pursuit of stuff has gotten us.
Anne Quindlen, an innocuous, squishy-middle liberal who writes very well, gets it:
Here I go, stating the obvious: stuff does not bring salvation.No it doesn't. Holocaust survivor Dr.Viktor Frankl observed that happiness can occur even in the extreme privation of a concentration camp. He also believed that happiness cannot be pursued for its own sake. To achieve happiness, one must forget about it and pursue a cause greater than oneself and be true to ones conscience.
And Salvation? One must look a little higher than the Best Buy sign.
The upside of failure is that it draws our attention back to the fundamentals.
6 comments:
Nice job here and through you Nietzsche lives, if that's the Ray Nietzsche you speak of, the old Green Bay version of Dick Butkus, the two towering Icons of an America lost. The tough, ready to fight and ready to win Americans who today have turned into liberal whining me first and appeasing whimps.
This Quindlen piece is good for a liberal woman and you made it better. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and yours, lets hope folks like us & Savage can wake this bumbling giant up and defeat the sickness pervading the land, liberalism.
Dude, you made my day!
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to you, too.
To paraphrase our favorite Dutch Uncle, with God's Help and our perseverance, we can put things back on the right track that the founders intended.
I'm glad :>) God let us hope and pray this can be done and soon as we quickly dissolve into this liberal governmental abyss.
our founders would have taken each of these friggin traitors and hung 'em on a yard arm one by one while taking names.keep up the good work sir and I'll visit often :>)
Our first clue of this problem has been found in our infants for generations now. You know...The baby who gets the big plastic toy and ends up playing with the box it came in.
That's a beautiful analogy Anonymous, that's the dumbing down of America through failing schools and family taken over by the moronic morally bankrupt left,
Wow. Some really great posts, here, Silverfiddle. It's 3AM and I'm up way too late to be commenting in more depth. Suffice it to say, I'm impressed with your analysis. Powerful stuff.
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