Ever since I was a teenager I’ve been saying that what we’re seeing is the “denouement” of free market capitalism. I was long out of my teen years when everyone cheered as the Iron Curtain came down—and nobody’s saying that the USSR was good model for socialism—or anything else. But I think that, as loyal Americans, we assumed that unregulated capitalism would keep us free and relatively happy. What we’re seeing now is that this is most definitely not the case.
Our constitution provides us with the right to free enterprise, as long as that enterprise is not expressly criminal. There are no mandates that require our activities to be beneficial; in fact, many of the most profitable products and services offered in the US are clearly harmful to the people foolish enough to consume them. As examples, the fast food industry addicts people–mostly kids–to fat and sugar, causing obesity and other obvious health hazards, and the entertainment industry aggressively degrades our civilization through popular music and film–again targeting mostly kids–glorifying, crime, drugs, promiscuous sex, and dishonesty. The pharmaceutical industry isn’t exactly a friend of mankind either, as I’ve written elsewhere. I’m afraid that these problems are the natural and unavoidable products of capitalism: people making a living in any legal way they can.
In particular, as I’ve written elsewhere, we face a dwindling spiral of corruption and the deterioration of our democracy. How can we have a government “of the people” when only the richest of the rich can possibly get elected to an important office? The mixture of lobbying, quid pro quo campaign contributions, spending earmarks, etc., have essentially turned the authority for setting and enforcing public policy over to the corporations who control the politicians we elect.
This is exacerbated by the fact that the media, owned as it is by for-profit corporations, no longer even attempts to uncover and report the truth in many critically important areas. What you see, hear, and read is essentially entertainment aimed at amusing and distracting a race of increasingly oblivious sheep.
Btw, this whole idea would have been considered outright sedition if it were posited in 1989 when the Wall came down. Now, however, it’s gaining ground with some serious thinkers and loyal Americans.
I know this sounds depressing; it is! That’s why I blog. The only chance we have is alerting people to the challenge. And thanks, Fingers, for being a part of this.
Craig Shields Philosophy and Religion capitalism, endarkenment