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The coming expansion by Ran Prieur Monday, July 29, 2002
When you hear "the economy," think "corporate rule":
A strong economy means strong corporate rule;
economic collapse means the collapse of corporate
rule. It's not exactly true, and it's false in times
and places where corporations are not dominant, but
right now it comes a lot closer to the truth than
the usual background assumption that what's good for
"the economy" is good for people.
I know: A good economy means you can get a job, and
in a really good economy you can get such a
good job that if you work 70 hours a week for years
you can buy a nice house in a nice place where you
never have to deal with those disturbing poor people
who are too lazy to work 70 hours a week, who you
never learned to relate to because you're so busy in
the economy, and then you can die lonely and
bewildered in your big empty secure house.
Doesn't it make you angry that you need "the
economy" to have the alleged privilege of doing what
someone tells you to do all day so you don't starve
and freeze on the streets? Aren't you infuriated by
your humiliating dependence on a system that gives
you no participation in power? "Live free or die" is
easy to say in an imaginary scenario of security
agents kicking down your door, but whenever I
suggest that economic collapse is a step in the
right direction, I'm accused of being anti-human, of
wishing for starvation and death, by people who are
effectively saying "Please, please, let us live as
frightened powerless dependents, anything to not
die."
We are in an ugly, awful situation. Better avert
your eyes. Here's a nice parable: For countless
thousands of years the people of Earthor lived in
happy villages, getting everything they needed
through small, consent-based communities where
everyone was a friend and everything was out in the
open. Then they were conquered by evil giants!
Now, everything the people made, every house and
every bit of food, was given to the giants, and the
giants allocated it to keep themselves in power: the
people who obeyed the giants the best, and did their
most evil work, got the most stuff; and the people
who refused to labor for the giants at all were
harassed and isolated and sometimes outright killed;
and most people in the middle were kept always
wanting more than they got to keep them always
busy.
Now one day a hero rose among the people and said,
"Let us kill the giants." But then some
sensible-sounding voices said, "Without the giants,
who will provide our food?" Actually these were
people who worked closely with the giants, and knew
that if the system changed they would lose all their
stuff. But other people listened to the hero, so the
giants had to come kill them all, and everything
went back to normal, except the giants got even
stronger and meaner.
But then another hero appeared, and by this time the
people hated the giants so much that the
giant-collaborators couldn't stop them, and they did
it -- they killed all the giants! But they had been
living under the giants for so long now that they
didn't know how to live differently. Some people
managed to start awkward consent-based villages with
tedious "community meetings" ruined by everyone's
emotional problems from living under the giants. But
these groups fell apart or were taken over, and soon
enough, strangely, they all found themselves once
again ruled by evil giants. Except now the giants
were subtle and persuasive, and the people loved
them, or at least they thought a world without
giants was grossly unrealistic, and they blamed
their unhappiness on other people.
And so it went. But look! The giants cannot stay the
same size and survive. To live they must constantly
grow. They even have a saying: "Any evil giant that
doesn't grow dies." But now they're getting so big
that their bulk is all dead bones cracking under
their unimaginable weight, so big that they can do
nothing but blunder around clumsily, ravenously
consuming everything in reach to grow still bigger.
And their hunger has turned half the land of Earthor
into grey smoky deserts. Anyone who looks can see it
coming: The giants are going to run out of food, and
die.
What then? Let's return now to the less deeply
nested fantastic world of our own Earth. The giant
patterns that command our labor under threat of
death or prison, that manage and distribute the
products of our labor to keep themselves in place,
are breaking down. In the last two weeks the price
of "stocks" -- tokens of collaboration with the
ruling system -- has fallen hard, minus a few
temporary half-recoveries caused by covert buying
spikes. The "economy" is dying, and anyone who's
been looking has seen it coming for years.
The propaganda industry will blame corporate greed,
as if this could have been avoided if corporations
weren't greedy and fish didn't swim. In fact,
collapse is the only possible result of an economy
that survives by taking more from its environment
than it gives. In this case the environment is not
only the earth, which is running out of "resources,"
but the human species, which is running out of
willingness to participate in a coercive and
disempowering system.
I'm not calling for civilization to fall and kill
billions of people in ways other than old age, any
more than I'm calling for winter to come and kill a
lot of plants. I'm just noticing it coming and
declaring that it's perfectly natural. Liberals
fantasize about a "soft landing," maybe involving a
benevolently oppressive global government
implementing a hundred years of strict forced
contraception and strict forced resource frugality.
What's soft about that? It sounds like going into a
cold swimming pool slowly and painfully for 20
minutes instead of just jumping in. We're all going
to be dead in a hundred years anyway. Let's some of
us die young so all of us don't have to live in some
eco-puritan dystopia.
I'm not joking -- I'm just refusing to fetishize
dying. We're programmed to think of dying as the
ultimate worst thing, as the negation of living,
when really it's a normal friendly part of living,
and what's negating our living is our fear of
dying or physical damage. Our culture whips this
fear into an insane frenzy, not just to keep us
enslaved, but because our culture is an evil mass
consciousness, a vampire that cultivates and feeds
on our emotional contractiveness.
Our contractiveness is the same thing as our
"progress," our descent on engines of disconnection
into an artificial hell of computer spreadsheets and
tax laws, pavement and cars that turn the grass
under your feet into a mile-a-minute green blur,
science that turns your view of the sky into
mathematical formulas in windowless rooms. But
everything that contracts must expand.
The contraction we call the Roman Empire cut down
the forests of Europe. When it finally relaxed, the
forests grew back, but the people of Europe only
grew back a little before they shrank again --
self-sufficient rural communities devolved into
feudal estates, which got sucked into larger and
larger centralized nation-states, which are now
falling into the vortex of the unprecedented
power-sucking abilities of global corporations.
We're as deep now as we've ever been, and I'm not
sure, but I think we're out of room to go deeper,
unless they figure out how to trap our consciousness
inside computers.
I think the next time we expand, we're going to
follow through. I suspect that humans are smarter
now than ever -- that intelligence is the default
human condition, and stupidity has to be
manufactured, and our intelligence has been growing
stronger and stronger, invisibly staying a step
behind advances in stupidity-manufacturing
techniques, the same way weeds and bacteria have
been growing resistant to high-tech poisons. The
controlling interests seem to be winning, but the
lid's about to blow off, and when it does, those of
us who don't die of starvation or disease will see a
blossoming of human power like nothing in
history.
Here's what I mean by "human power": Right now if
you need a place to live, you can't just find a
place and live there, no matter how responsible you
are. Places are all "owned," and not by people but
by contractive patterns using people, by banks and
businesses and money-grasping habits of individuals.
You have to apply to these alleged "owners," submit
to degrading rituals, accept permission to occupy a
place, not change it in any important way, and pay a
huge monthly sum of money -- a billion rivers of
money running from the poor to the rich. And the
only thing you get in return, what you're actually
tricked into demanding, is to have your
power/responsibility reduced even further by
depending on the "owners" to make necessary
repairs.
When we get our power back, you'll just pick an
appropriate place and live there, and build or
maintain shelter that fits the skills of you or your
group. And in the transition to this, we'll survive
by sleeping on each other's couches, by filling up
our houses and learning to live in the same space
with other people again instead of buying satanic
isolation. We'll turn our lawns into vegetable
gardens and feed ourselves with our own hands
instead of depending on money and supermarkets. Our
alleged poverty will lead us to rebuild community
and autonomy that were destroyed by our alleged
wealth.
Link by link, we will stop depending on and
answering to higher powers and begin depending on
and answering to the lower powers of our bodies and
the earth. The earth is us too, and when we get our
power back, monoculture farms will be set free to be
grassland and forest again, in which humans will
live in deep and enduring symbiosis. I'm not saying
we'll all be hunter/gatherers, but some of us will,
and at the very least that economy is the necessary
safety net above which we will try other things.
When we get our power back, the
homeless/jobless/moneyless will reach a critical
mass where the police can no longer stop us and we
know it. If an eagle wants more space, it fights a
competitor, and typically neither bird is badly
hurt, and both have the experience of engaging the
world with their energy. This is not violence but a
vigorous physical way of resolving conflict; it's
not about control or extermination but balance. In
all the known universe only civilized authorities do
not work this way, do not tolerate physically
fighting them or running from them, do not give any
options but total submission or death. That's why
all of us who have not been killed are full of
suppressed rage. And if we channel this rage wisely,
we will not exterminate the authorities so they can
escape and come back in the form of us; we will hold
them in the one position they cannot endure, of
living as equals with other life, until they
dissolve.
Totalitarian control structures are fascinating: The
police not only deny us power -- they deny it to
themselves, believing that they lack the authority
to compromise because they're "just doing their job"
for someone else. But if you look up the chain, no
one has any power -- even the highest elite are
powerlessly following a script written by a
financial balance or a country or a warped sense of
"order," a program taking control so it can take
more control so it can...
This system is an anti-system, a multilevel
negation, built of blocks of lack of power, lack of
responsibility, lack of awareness. This raises
mind-bending questions: How do you destroy a void?
And if nobody has any real power, where does the
power go?
I think the answer is that power isn't actually
being taken but being blocked, in nonhumans by
simply killing them and in humans by socialization
that begins in infancy, punishing people for having
a will of their own, for being aware, for channeling
any bottom-up power, until by age 30 most of us are
barely alive, almost as Philip K. Dick wrote: "Not a
person but a sort of walking, hiding symptom of
their way of life."
But blocked power just keeps building up. It wants
to flow up through our cells, our muscles, our
blood. If we keep holding it back it's going to
explode! That's not good. We need to learn to focus
it, like a rocket focuses an explosion to push it
into orbit, like a plant focuses growth into the
roots before the stalk. The famous biblical line is
a mistranslation: The word was used to describe good
horses, not their submissiveness but their ability
to focus their attention and respond instantly to
the slightest cues.
The disciplined will inherit the earth.
© 2002, Ran Prieur.
Comments? Contact ranprieur@yahoo.com.
Past articles by Ran Prieur:
Bush saves America
The system works
The soul of progress
J.R.R. Tolkien:
The man who saw tomorrow
Violence vs. pacifism: A quick tour
Thinking through the fall
The mathematics of responsibility
Untamed futures
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