BatUtilityBelt wrote: ↑Fri Oct 22, 2021 12:40 pm
Mossman wrote: ↑Tue Oct 19, 2021 10:41 pm
Consumers aren't born, they're made.
I think this is the truest statement in the entire thread. While I was only posting about one aspect (crippled supply chain), the conversation spread out and started involving many other aspects of "free trade". But the point above is poignant. You can't blame people with barely enough to eek by for picking their lowest cost options.
That's certainly a big part of it. We all like getting more for less, regardless of financial status. That's human nature... But it's not that alone. We're conditioned and encouraged from the moment we're born to want shiny things we don't need, to chase status, to live beyond our means, to view possessions as intrinsically tied to our
identity, to judge others according to what kind of car they drive, what kind of phone they have, what kind of house they live in, etc, and to judge
ourselves as less-than for not having those things. We're not born highly prioritizing the acquisition of possessions. We're
taught to aspire to them, and to feel the pain of shame if we don't have the biggest, fastest, newest whatever that everybody else has. The problem is; it's a vicious cycle. The thrill of acquisition is fleeting, and it's not long before we're in pursuit of something else that we can't live without. As a person who knows a thing or two about the mechanics of addiction, the pathology seems identical to me. This glitch in human psychology - as well as many others - are well known, and used to full extent to manipulate us.
As a result, we make ourselves slaves in pursuit of the money that will get us the things that we
think will make us happy. But there is no
thing that can make you happy. We're just brainwashed into believing that happiness can be bought. I know I'm not saying anything particularly revelatory or insightful here. We all know how advertising works, and that they use psychological tricks and play on our emotions, but the pernicious thing is; knowing how you're being manipulated doesn't make you impervious to manipulation.
It's designed to get past your critical thinking, and as long as you're being exposed to it, you're suggestible in ways that you're not even conscious of. The
worse thing is; it's not just advertising (and the "evil corporations") that perpetuate consumerism. It's our entire culture. We're inculcated in it, from movies, to magazines, to TV shows, to celebrities, to your co-workers, to your own mom and dad... I got the whole: "work is the most important thing in life" speech from
my dad. He taught me that if you work hard, and sacrifice, and make a lot of money for your employer, then you'll have a happy life. It didn't matter if you hated it, as long as it paid a lot of money. Enjoying your occupation was irrelevant to him. When I was in my 20s, I was a poor graphic artist, and my father hated that fact. He would frequently tell me what other (higher-paying) professions I should have chosen, and when I would say: "I don't think I would enjoy doing that", he would say: "You're not
supposed to enjoy it... They wouldn't call it 'work' if you liked it". My father worked far too many hours at jobs that he hated, and missed far too much of his life. He never made a whole lot of money, and I don't know if he was ever happy, or even knew what that was. He was only 57 when he died.