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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Our Produce-or-Die Culture Is Killing Us -- And We're Idiotically Grinning and Bearing It

By Joe Bageant, JoeBageant.com. Posted November 3, 2009.


We've been reduced to "human assets" in a relentless economic machine. And we can't even complain: appearing cheerful is vital when all of life is monitored by an employer.
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Every afternoon when I knock off from writing, after I suck down a Modelo beer and take an hour nap, I step out onto the 400-year-old cobbled street, with its hap-scatter string of vendors lining both sides. All sorts of vendors -- vegetable vendors, vendors of tacos, chicharrones, chenille bedspreads and plucked chickens, cigarros, soft drinks, sopa and suet. Merchants whose business address consists of a card table in front of their casita.

Here in this working class neighborhood on Calle Zaragoza, tourists seldom venture, and the neighborhood merchants' customers are their neighbors. Their goods are the common fare of daily family life in Mexico. Today, at a table less than two blocks away, I purchased a dozen brown eggs, with the idea of making huevos rancheros. The purchase took three quarters of an hour, and included stumbling but cheerful half English/half Spanish conversations with the six vendors between my casita and the table of Gabriel, the old egg and cheese vendor with an artificial leg and wizened smile who assures me that rooster-fertilized eggs make a man go all night. "I am too old to care about that," I half speak, half gesture in that rudimentary sign language understood everywhere. "Hawwww" he chortles and says something in Spanish I cannot understand. An English speaking bystander, a teenager with a backward baseball cap and dressed in "L.A. sag," translates: "He says his pendejo is as hard as his plastic leg. You still alive! You never too old!"

These vendors are not poor people or peasants. They own homes, drive cars, watch cable television, send their children to college and do most of the things North Americans do. But their jobs are their livelihoods, not their lives, and every transaction is permeated with the ebb and flow of daily neighborhood and family life. "Is Maria going to graduate after all? Si! But by just by the hair in her nose! Who is going to sell fireworks for the Feast of Saint Andrew?" (Saint Andrew is the patron saint of Ajijic.)

Behind the plastered brick walls along the street mechanics fix cars, dentists pull teeth and teachers cheer preschoolers onward in a chirping Spanish rendition of Eensy Weensy Spider. The entire street is busily, but not hectically, engaged in making a living, most of the people doing so within 50 feet of where they will sleep tonight. But before they sleep they will sit out on the street, or perhaps the tiny neighborhood plaza, gossiping with the same neighbors who've been their customers all day. The same families into which their children will marry and whose sick elders they will burn candles for in the ancient stone church, founded as a Spanish colonial mission to civilize the Huichol Indians who've since retreated up into the mountains to honor their "god of the opening clouds" in peyote rituals.

Obviously work and commerce have their problems here, just as anywhere else. The peso rises and falls. Cheap Chinese imports crowd out domestic goods. People work hard, especially tradesmen and laborers, but there is a complete lack of obsession and stress that characterizes North American jobs. Which, of course, many Canadians and Americans retired to Ajijic take for laziness.

It may be my bias, or my imagination, or my distaste for toil, but from here America looks like one big workhouse, "under God, indivisible, with time off to shit, shower and shop." A country whose citizens have been reduced to "human assets" of a vast and relentless economic machine, moving human parts oiled by commodities and kept in motion by the edict, "produce or die." Where employment and a job dominates all other aspects of life, and the loss of which spells the loss of everything.

Yeah, yeah, I know, them ain't jobs -- in America we don't have jobs, we have careers. I've read the national script, and am quite aware that all those human assets writing computer code and advertising copy, or staring at screen monitors in the "human services" industry are "performing meaningful and important work in a positive workplace environment." Performing? Is this brain surgery? Or a stage act? If we are performing, then for whom? Exactly who is watching?

Proof abounds of the unending joy and importance of work and production in our wealth-based economy. Just read the job recruitment ads. Or ask any of the people clinging fearfully by their fingernails to those four remaining jobs in America. But is a job -- hopefully a good one -- and workplace strivance really everything? Most of us would say, "Well of course not." But in a nation that now sends police to break up the tent camps and car camps of homeless unemployed citizens who once belonged to the middle class, it might well be everything.

In one of those divine moments of synchronicity writers pray for, I just saw reinforcement of the above. Checking my email web browser, one of those annoying ads masquerading as advice, popped up. It reads: "Doing good work is no longer enough! Ten tips to keep from being laid off your job." Shown is a cheerful young woman at a desk, feeling deliriously safe about her job, judging from her hysterical bug-eyed smile, thanks to "These Ten Tips!" from a commercial jobs agency. When personal employment fears, job terror and insecurity, can be captured and turned into a job for someone else, there's not much room left for the general spirit of commonality, or a sense of a shared commons (such as this Mexican street) of the nation's work-life. Not when any of us could become indigent at a moment's notice.


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See more stories tagged with: capitalism, mexico, ajijic, calle zaragoza

Joe Bageant is author of the book, Deer Hunting With Jesus: Dispatches from America's Class War (Random House Crown), about working class America. A complete archive of his on-line work, along with the thoughts of many working Americans on the subject of class may be found on his website.

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Myopic Crap ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Nov 3, 2009 1:20 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Joe has retreated, with my guess is, some sort of income from the rat race of America ... But to infer that Mexico or any Latin American country is some sort of Valhalla is just pure myopic crap.

I suggest Joe visit the border towns, the maquiladoras or the "waste disposal sites" outside of Mexico City where children rummage through the filth infested garbage for food and salvageables.

It is not just Americans who are being consumed in the this "free trade" world. Joe would do well to stop blaming Americans for being so pliant and gullible and begin to look at "The Big Picture".

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» RE: Been there Posted by: ETSpoon
» RE: Been there Posted by: aussidawg
We have been assimilated
Posted by: BLAN on Nov 3, 2009 1:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I concur, Joe. We have, as a country, become conditioned to finding the rainbow, not for the beauty of the prisms of multi-colored light, but for the pot of gold that surely must be somewhere around if we persist in our search for it.

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While I agree with Joe's main points
Posted by: deutsey on Nov 3, 2009 3:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
as one of the beleagured drones hanging on by the fingernails that he writes about, reading his essay was like having someone pour salt in wounds that are already quite painful enough.

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Myopic Crap III
Posted by: Louisa on Nov 3, 2009 4:29 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Beyond sneering at the idea that trying to keep a job to support oneself is somehow beneath the dignity of real human beings the author seems possessed of all kinds of strange obsessions.

America should be a land free of a homeless and jobless class of citizens; and that far from being free of such a blight, the numbers of that class of persons is increasing.

But anyone that's been around even a little in foreign countries knows that abject poverty abounds. And Mexico is somehow held up as an example of what our country should be more like? If the economic collapse continues it will be, Joe - but in all the ways your story somehow misses.

The author had better be careful that he isn't targeted for kidnapping or that his hand isn't sliced from his wrist just so that his shiny watch can be stolen from him. Or maybe he'll just be gunned down in a drug war mishap while he's shopping for eggs...

What is this guy - a failed fiction writer? I was sucked in by the first few sentences only for the evocative quality of those first few words to suddenly disappear behind a wall of bu77$it about how much the U.S. sucks as compared to some imaginary place in Mexico where life is somehow wonderfully fulfilling amid the squalor.

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» RE: Myopic Crap III Posted by: Vinkenoog
» RE: Myopic Crap III Posted by: HalEBurton
» RE: Myopic Crap III Posted by: Louisa
» RE: Myopic Crap III Posted by: paulaH
» RE: Myopic Bullshit Posted by: ETSpoon
» RE: Myopic Crap III Posted by: J_Mo
Modern distopia
Posted by: Farasien on Nov 3, 2009 4:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unfortunately, Joe is right about us and what we have become/are becoming. The american model of capital is that life is really nothing more than multiple sources of untapped profit, where every moment activity and virtue is simply a pile of cash that has yet to be hauled away by some enterprising crook. It strikes me how little of our decaying world is yet spared by the mechanizations of the marketers and other assorted human filth whose sole motive is to destroy as much as possible at the highest possible profit. One of the largest examples of this came to me when I took a hard look at Google... If you think about it, they make nothing, really. They sell nothing and produce nothing with any real value- add space in the ghost domain of the internet, and for doing this, they are one of the richest companies in the US. Look at the investment banksters- they sold empty promises/lies to gullible people with the money they borrowed/stole from taxpayers. People worry about image- a thing that is transient as vapor and almost as substancial. We worry about what some unknown nobody thinks of our facebook profile in a cloistered room thousands of miles away and fret over the list of 'friends' or 'followers' we have on some vapid, narcissitic 'social' networking site and don't even know the name of the guy we live right next to. We concern ourselves with the minutia of idiocy that we'll never be affected by half the world away but are unaware of what happens in the neighborhood we happen to live in. We care about major causes and movements but don't even know what's happening in our own city, and in America at least, many of us can't even name our own fucking president without a half-dozen clues.

We're living in the twilight of our borrowed time. Things can't continue like this for much longer, and as history teaches, a detached and narcissistic people-such as we all are or are in the process of becoming- will soon find themselves at their well-deserved end.

Its past time to wake up. I fear its already too late. Maybe, its time to start preparing for survival rather than thinking of new ways to try and improve things. There is a point at which the only way to cure the patient is to kill them.

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» RE: Modern distopia Posted by: Spiritgirl
» RE: Modern distopia Posted by: madregal
» RE: Modern distopia Posted by: HoboHomo
» Hey, don't diss dystopia! Posted by: HoboHomo
A job that will make me happy
Posted by: CitizenWhy on Nov 3, 2009 4:39 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So true, and it all starts with believing that there is a "job that will make me happy" and with "getting into the right college" and "meritocracy' and "What are you going to do with your major?" and "what do you do?"

New York used to be full of poor, humanistic villages. On our block in the summer the adults used to sing and dance for each other, recite poems, play classical music on the violin, tell jokes. We kids had endless varieties of street games, the biggest expense being buying a cheap rubber ball called a spaldeen. We had 2 weeks "seasons" for all sorts of action games, including chalk art, carpeting the neighborhood with lavish productions. We regularly visited the free museums. At home my parents recited or read aloud Shakespeare, Dickins, Kets, etc. Now we go to work, come home, amuse or rest, go to bed. Bah humbug!

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Bummer...
Posted by: dougontrack on Nov 3, 2009 4:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a drag it is...

"No jokers, smokers,or midnight tokers allowed in Mainstream American society and culture, which consists of working, consuming and "appearing to be,"but never purely being."

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Produce or Die Culture is Right-Wing Republican Culture
Posted by: nobyjingo on Nov 3, 2009 4:57 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
People should try to remember that it is the policies of Big Business, Big Banks, Big Pharma, Big Insurance, Big Industry, Big CORPORATIONS, the Republican Elite and the Big Capitalists that got us into the economic mess and that these same policies ---- the do or die culture for the 70% MAJORITY Common Population ---- are what we don't want and not vote any Republican into office for considerable time, but it looks like New York hasn't had it bad enough economically because they have chosen to give the Republicans another chance to make the situation worse before the economy has crawled out of the hole the Republicans dug for the nation. Republicans and Conservative Republican policy is what is destroying the nation from within, because Conservatives do not concern themselves with the whole nation, only what is in the interest of big capital, and are loyal to no country.

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Hey Joe, I don't think I'd like being an egg vendor in Mexico
Posted by: lulu on Nov 3, 2009 5:01 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I agree with many of your points - we're a relentlessly work-driven culture with an entirely inadequate safety net - I enjoy life in my North American city and (gasp) I enjoy my job most of the time. Sure, 8 to 6 is the new 9 to 5, there are always too many meetings, too many projects...but "at the end of the day" (sorry), the work is occasionally intellectually stimulating - a heck of a lot more so that selling eggs and making small-talk all day would be. Maybe I've just drunken the Kool-Aid, Joe, but I LIKE the anonymity of my life - I come home from work and get to do my own thing. Being in my neighbor's business and having them in mine all day long would SUCK for an introvert like me. As for the supposed "materialism"? I am not under court order to shop all the time, and I don't. What's more, I like that access and choice is so plentiful and convenient for me to buy the things I do need. I put very little effort into it, and I like that. Yes, our system needs a major overhaul to get big business and banks off the taxpayer teat and reinstitute a safety net and adequate standard of living for all, and we could accomplish that fairly simply with ranked choice or instant runoff voting to get some third-party representation in govt. I'm not holding my breath for any of that. But I'm also not moving to Mexico any time soon. Enjoy the huevos rancheros - that sounds good. I might stop and get some on my way to work - and still arrive at 8, well-fed and...cheerful. Sorry 'bout that.

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» Great attitude, lulu! Posted by: moloko velocet
» RE: Great attitude, lulu! Posted by: paulaH
» There is nothing else Posted by: Hiroak
» Being introverted Posted by: njguy73
Easy life
Posted by: colinsyme on Nov 3, 2009 5:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As l have recently retired and on a fixed income -with the usual amount of gold coins stashed away,just in case, l feel that l live that life here in the UK. This morning l found some Bluet mushrooms(the last of the year)and about to have a fry-up with garlic, butter and white wine. This afternoon will find me down at my local pier where l hope to catch my evening meal and a gossip with my buddies who no doubt are to take advantage of the high tide which coveniently comes in at 3pm today.

Although it does help to be a rich guy in Belise or Mexico one can live that life anywhere if you use your brains and stop spending all your cash on unnecessary consumer goods, l have sold my car and cycle everywhere, use a cheap PAYG phone, buy fresh food and vegetables daily from a farmers market and buy most of my clothes from a local Oxfam store. Easy life? yes l have it.

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» RE: asy life Posted by: JERSEYDAN
» RE: asy life Posted by: colinsyme
Somehow this is news?
Posted by: frantaylor on Nov 3, 2009 5:12 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's been JUST LIKE THIS for time immemorial. There is NOTHING NEW going on here.

Ah, the short memories and the absence of history lessons. Read about "company towns". Read "The Jungle" and focus on the workers' conditions instead of the gross food anecdotes. Good lord, read ANY book from the early industrial age.

The implication that something new or different is going on here is just silly.

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» RE: Somehow this is news? Posted by: jgilb
» RE: But... Posted by: Cybershaman
» RE: Somehow this is news? Posted by: melloe2
quite right
Posted by: drinkycro on Nov 3, 2009 5:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
well said Loisa

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incredulouscynic
Posted by: rwshea on Nov 3, 2009 5:53 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm sure I must be mistaken in this case (hopefully), but it has been my experience that many (most) of those who wax poetic on the beauties of the simple life have never actually had to live it. For real. You know, being poor.

They mostly come from upper-middle to wealthy families who have both the resources and the time to expend traversing around the globe in search of their "inner" happiness. Good for you. You're lucky.

The rest of us plebs are not so blessed. We live day-to-day wondering if we can pay our electricity bill - not packing the right stuff to take on our move to the "simple" life. So, enjoy, if that is your situation. It's a rare luxury

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street vendors' pay
Posted by: littlepitcher on Nov 3, 2009 5:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Street vendors don't make all that much money, are subject to every economic downturn as a threat to their independence and their families', and it takes just one illness to destroy a month's profits.

If these folks are living the middle-class lifestyle, chances are good that it is subsidized by remittances from the good ol' USA, or by under-the-counter sales of "rifa".

I've been a street vendor of produce and other items, and the profits aren't large.

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There is middle ground...
Posted by: Sympa on Nov 3, 2009 6:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...a middle ground must be strived for, mainly due to sheer demographics. A better approximation of this middle ground would be the artisanal socio-economic culture in a country like France, which is both wealthy and frequently happy. BTW, Americans work mucho hours, but that doesn’t mean they’re particularly productive!

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» RE: There is middle ground... Posted by: kamcallen
» RE: There is middle ground... Posted by: tommy_slothrop
Poor Joe. Perhaps a talk with a high school guidance counselor...
Posted by: franklyspanking on Nov 3, 2009 6:32 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...might set you down a road where you can find an occupation that makes you happy?

I mean, you could get an education, or learn a trade, or perhaps engage in civic or abroad service for a period whilst you figure out what you might be good at.

Unless you're already fairly comfortable, whining just won't put much food on the table.

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Reading comprehensions at an all time low at Alternet.org
Posted by: ETSpoon on Nov 3, 2009 6:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The thesis of Joe Bageant's is that American workers, and yes that includes you white collar office drones, have willingly or not given up the gains in the work-place, the 40-hour week, the paid vacation, that previous generations of US workers often fought and died for. I have heard and read too younger Americans utter the nonsense, "if you're not working 60 to 70 hours a week you're lazy."

And of course if one is working two or three jobs that deprives some one else of that job. Oh, I know there may be economic necessity for working two, three jobs but the drive for stock profitability give cover for corporate managers' cutting worker hours, benefits and/or conversely justifies mandatoried overtime and hiring freezes. Since corporate American has taken over the reins of government laws allow corporate managers to fire one at will.

When I first entered the world of "work" one applied for a "job" at the "personnel office." Now, except for sweatshops like Micky D's and Wal Mart, one has to turn in or enter online a resume for a "career" or a "position" to "human resources." That is no mistake. In the eyes of corporate management human beings, i.e. "human resources," are merely fungible assets. Things to be used, used up and thrown away when no longer useful.

Bush Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's seemingly heartless, "Come on, people are fungible[,]" during a 2004 press conference, was not a gaffe. As a card-carrying member of the upper end of the coordinator-managerial class that is all his fellow humans are, easily replaceable, interchangeable parts.

And that is you, Mr. and Mrs. America. Yep, in the eyes of the bosses, those residents of the boardroom and corner offices on the top floors, with whom you never interact with on a daily basis that is all you are, fungible, replaceable, an interchangeable part with a name rather than a part-number.

Oh, and about the low reading comprehension. Well I agree Bageant rambled too long about his Mexican residence, but that was merely by way of contrast with the American way of volunteer-slavery.

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undeniably true
Posted by: ugotstahwonder on Nov 3, 2009 6:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It seems to me that many of the people commenting are facing a truth that is too horrific for them to willingly realize. The fact of the matter is that family and community as well as quality of life have suffered at the hands of capitalism immeasurably. From out the crux of this article we can trace all of our current cares and woes. We are being pulled into and under the wheels of the machine.

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Sad
Posted by: ubeeno on Nov 3, 2009 7:02 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thats what the Sheeple do best. Grin and Bear it! So sad.

RT
Ultimate Anonymity

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» RE: Addendum Posted by: ETSpoon
Yes, but....
Posted by: Roger Király on Nov 3, 2009 7:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Joe Bageant makes some good points that are easily verified by even a short squint at this country's corporate "culture", but the underlying tone makes me uneasy. It reminds me of the experience our daughter had as a scholarship student at ritzy Sarah Lawrence College. During a Freshman orientation session, she was the only person at the large table who had graduated from a public high school. When she was asked, "Where do you summer?" She smiled and said, "The same place I winter." Oops; you can imagine the resulting stares and silence. Then, another Freshman looked at my daughter and gushed, "Oh, it must be so ROMANTIC to be poor."

Uh-huh.

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» RE: Yes, but.... Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: Yes, but.... Posted by: Dboy
Yes, different values
Posted by: lclark on Nov 3, 2009 7:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I liked this article.

Corporatism has absorbed most people. It is difficult to have a non-salaried existance.

The one thing I return to is the family farms. After NAFTA the corporate food giants bought up land in Mexico and established huge farms. They also consolidated the purchase and distribution of food and began exclusively buying fromthier own factory farms. So the family farms could not find buyers of thier fruit and vegetables that now became imports. The family in your area can't dig thier sweet potatoes even at half the cost of that sweet potato in the store that comes from South America. The local grocery chain can't buy local watermelon because then the distributor will not supply him. Now they are working at the local chain stocking vegetables for a little more than minimum wage.

And the political parties go on and on about how small business is the backbone of the economy and create the most jobs and how they support them.

Just as in energy, they established another cartel around food. And now prices are going up and up.

This corporatism has resulted in the increasing division of wealth between the super rich and the rest of us and restricted the choices we can make.

There should be some thought given as to how we can decontruct an economy that does not allow individuals and small groups of people to earn a living outside the standard salaried structure.

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» RE: Yes, different values Posted by: lclark
Nice Article
Posted by: Gravitas on Nov 3, 2009 7:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even though there is nothing new, we need to keep reminding ourselves that life in the U.S. has been reduced to being glorified serfs of the corporate elite. And only we can change that!,

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» RE: Nice Article Posted by: Dboy
The Century of the Self
Posted by: wbblack on Nov 3, 2009 7:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I recently watched a documentary aired on the BBC in 2002. The Century of the Self argues -- quite successfully -- that we have all been brainwashed to see ourselves as consumers first.(Although in varying degrees, I guess) It documents how capitalists and politicians in the US and in Great Brittan used psychological warfare to turn the masses in the US from seeing themselves as workers to seeing themselves as buying machines. Freud, his daughter Anna and his diabolical nephew Edward Bernays -- who according to the documentary founded the profession of public relations -- are the villains in this evolving story. I almost forgot large elements of the US and GB corporate and political class. Them too! It's a four hour doc broken into four parts. It's worth watching if you have some time. I always knew that we've been brainwashed, but this shows you how.

The Century of the Self

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» RE: The Century of the Self Posted by: holypigeon
THE AUTHOR HAS IDEAL LIVING CONDITIONS
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Nov 3, 2009 7:41 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A nice comfortable, uncomplicated living arrangement. He doesn't mention family or children. He is self employed as a writer. For him, this is perfect. But for most of the rest of us it's unrealistic. I get the part about over-worked Amercians who work long hours, have to be available 24/7 on a cell phone and have the lap-top cranked up at all times (you never know). That's not a way to live. Technology has enabled people to become tethered to their jobs. That's the habit that should be broken. At some point we go home from work. Period. Far too much importance is attached to 'feeling necessary'.
what's important is doing a good job while at work and then going home to attend to things that have nothing to do with work. But they are important. I commend the author's Mexican neighbors who seem content with the little things, but Americans are different. We overdo the work thing, true. But most of us don't aspire to having our children grow up to sell fruit on the streets, however quaint it is. We aim higher and I don't criticize it. I do believe that the matter of free time has to be addressed. Maybe include it in the list of things we do to stay healthy. Along with exercise and a good diet. Stop running in circles and How about an occasional nap! ANNA

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80% on the money and 100% wrong
Posted by: kiatoa on Nov 3, 2009 7:52 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a lot of truth to the social insights in this article but for a lot of people the reality of live in Mexico probably isn't quite that peachy.

My biggest beef with this article and dozens of others like it on Alternet and other sites is that almost nobody gets to the deeper *why* of what is going on.

Ironically it is (IMHO of course) the *same* force that creates the abject poverty in Mexico that creates the wage slave environment in the US.

As long as this force persists and as long as intellectuals, journalists and bloggers fail to see it there will be no real change. Everything we do to fight for a better world will be little more than a stick in the sand to hold back the tide.

The force is land ownership. It creates slaves out of the many and makes masters of the few. And no, common ownership is not the answer. The answer is much more elegant than that ...

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» Please don't leave us hanging Posted by: tommy_slothrop
» Oh. You mean Georgian Economics. Posted by: tommy_slothrop
» Cannot be true Posted by: Dboy
» RE: Cannot be true Posted by: kiatoa
» RE: Cannot be true Posted by: richholland
Employees used to be called "personnel"--Now we're called "human resources"...
Posted by: JohnTruth2001 on Nov 3, 2009 8:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We are living our lives like disposable cogs for the military/banking/industrial complex!!!

Wake-up, sheeple!!!

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» Let's not forget "consumer" Posted by: lclark
» RE: Let's not forget "consumer" Posted by: astralman
Alienation
Posted by: ClassAct on Nov 3, 2009 8:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article expresses what Marxists have always called "alienation." Quite a large number of books exist addressing the subject, and one by Bertel Ollman features that word as its title. Discuss.

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Wealth and happiness are not the same
Posted by: james_allen on Nov 3, 2009 9:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I enjoyed this article, and related to it since my life as had a variety of ups and downs and heres and theres. I've had acquaintances whose income is hundreds of times greater than that of other acquaintances. Guess which group tends to show more anger and nastiness?

Some of the negative comments seemed to be saying that middle-class life in America is very tough and they're doubtful a poorer life in Mexico is better. I wonder if they realize their comments confirm the point that's being made about American materialism.

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Dear Alternet, Please upgrade your forum user interface
Posted by: mutatron on Nov 3, 2009 10:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alternet,

Your forum user interface sucks. I refer specifically to how the page reloads every time you make a comment or even vote.

This behavior might have been okay back in the 90s, but nowadays we have some new technologies you should look into, specifically Ajax. By far the best user experience for this type of forum is to be had at http://reddit.com . Please contact the developers there and see if you can hire them to redo your site. Under no circumstances should you make a Digg-like forum, their UI sucks too. Also, I'm a developer, I could update your forums to work quite excellently.

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White Trash from Wasilla
Posted by: scremf on Nov 3, 2009 11:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Joe once again you have hit the proverbial nail on the head! I remember well the day personnel departments starting calling themselves Human Resources. Human Resources? Like we're supposed to be mined or chopped down or something, then sent home broke after our human resources have been extracted. I woke up this morning in my 20' motorhome in Palinville and walked 2 miles to the coffee shop and I was the only one walking in Wasilla. People actually stop their pickup trucks and stare when you walk somewhere in Palinville. I mean what the hell, don't you have a job and a pickup, or at least a 4wheeler to get you around? Americans idea of community is My Space and Twitter. We've lost any sense of community and commons we ever once had. Latin America ain't perfect, but at least you can hang around the zocalo in the evening and shoot the breeze.

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» I hear you brother Posted by: Hiroak
MANDATORY VACATION LEGISLATION INTRODUCED
Posted by: drricklippin on Nov 3, 2009 12:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Before he became famous on the health care reform front Rep Alan Grayson of Florida introduced ist time ever US mandatory vacation legislation

I helped a bit on the health outcomes piece

Dr.Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa

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» I agree but ... Posted by: tommy_slothrop
It's not new news, but ...
Posted by: outragedtoo on Nov 3, 2009 1:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It can't be said often enough that American culture is dysfunctional in many ways.

Having lived and traveled in Mexico, as well as other parts of Central America, I know there are lots of problems there. Unfortunately, many are caused by the United States — for example imported agribusiness destroying many small farmers, and more recently our stupid drug laws and easy gun trade along the border creating a thriving Mafia-like organization called the Zetas.

However, there are places where a small business CAN allow you to live something close to a middle class life. And the people as a whole seem to enjoy life and each other's company much more than Americans do.

In fact, many of the ways people are able to support themselves with small businesses in Latin America would be impossible in the U.S. We are overloaded with legal issues — permits, expensive requirements, layers of government bureaucracy and paperwork. Try setting up a little taco stand in your neighborhood and see what happens?

We are inundated by laws written by and for corporations specifically to keep small businesses from taking root.

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I agree but ...
Posted by: tommy_slothrop on Nov 3, 2009 2:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's reasonable to suggest 20 hours/week considering how much of what we produce has a negative worth.

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Lugo
Posted by: lugoteehalt on Nov 3, 2009 3:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Appearing cheerful is vital in a society"

This is important stuff.

The main social control key words in the UK, I assume it's the same in the US are: professional; skills; trained; positive; negative; behavior.

"Positive"?? Well! QED.

Imagine walking about in an obviously totalitarian society with a scowl on your face complaining about everything.

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Yep, I think you're right Joe
Posted by: Alenna on Nov 3, 2009 4:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I lived in Germany back in the 1990's. When I first arrived, I was appalled to find that the stores and businesses were closed on Sundays and most of Saturdays. In addition many businesses closed for an hour at lunchtime. Sometimes they even closed for a month when the owners went away on holiday. Restaurant service was slow - people sat and had long conversations with other people. On the weekends, people went on picnics and volksmarches with family and friends.

It took me a long time to adjust to that, but when I returned to America, I really missed it - the peace and quiet and the idea that there is more to life than work and money.
Upcoming Christmastime is the worst - another impending capitalist money orgy is upon us. Does anyone remember the days when Christmas was a quiet friendly holiday?

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Nice for some
Posted by: Andrew_S on Nov 3, 2009 4:50 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The descriptive view of this author are rather interesting and smacks well of a lost sense of 'community'. While somehow projecting a soul seeking those long lost arts of living the good life by sending us a postcard. The author has discovered something that members of an ever growing crowd of US citizens are actually making. That is the to realize their Exodus from this collective quagmire while they can. The authors mistake was to not look a little further south. Perhaps Costa Rica, Brazil and even Honduras would have provided a much better opportunity to meld in with a quality that is more in line with the US citizens mindset.

Life for many a human is a relativity that we in north America are unable transpose with comfortable empathy. One wonders Why ?

Well lets say simple political conditioning and media control. The US and those who model the value of life based on their own sense of secular market driven security. While laboring for the ever-burgeoning state industrialized marketing complex as opposed to the simple life of barter. We have obviously become semi alienized to the process. We are now individually a bureaucratic indexed and quantified cog. Scarier is the prospect that we are fast becoming part of the greater collective. The rub is that once smug holder of the Qui Tam philosophy is realizing a myth and has a princely inheritance which is about to be sequestered to make way for the newer equalized citizen. I say a wise move on the authors part, enjoy the siesta's. Good luck on getting your money out in it's entirety if that is your plan!

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» RE: Nice for some Posted by: richholland
I was eager to read this article
Posted by: holypigeon on Nov 3, 2009 5:28 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but I do have to agree with some of the comments here. Tourists (esp. writers who are tourists) tend to romanticize the pace of daily life in other cultures. Still, there are some good points here. It should be pointed out that we are each responsible for the fact that the American worker is overworked, underpaid, and less productive than our counterparts in other industrialized countries. If you happen to have a job where you accrue some vacation time, you should take it, no excuses. You should not work overtime for no pay. Your boss should not have access to you 24-7. You should learn how to turn off your phone and not check your email all the time. If everyone did this as a matter of principle, we'd all be better off. I know some of you will role your eyes and think that this is either impossible or that it's each person's perogative to chose what kind of a worker they will be. Or you may think you don't have a choice, which is even worse. All of you work horses / willing slaves make life harder for the rest of us who actually enjoy our life outside of work.

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What good is technological development and growth...
Posted by: leafsong1 on Nov 3, 2009 6:31 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...if it does not improve the human condition? For all the labor saving devices we have invented, we are still desperately laboring for survival. Why? Because these are labor COST saving devices. They were never intended to serve us; they serve the capitalist elites. The combination of technological advance and capitalist greed predictably results in the devaluation of labor, and, in turn, the devaluation of the worth of the people's lives and the importance of their happiness and welfare. The corporate hierarchy is constantly looking for economies of scale, which is to say they are constantly looking for ways to cut us out of our share of the economy.

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oversymplified
Posted by: rhexom on Nov 3, 2009 8:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I hear everything that Joe is saying in his article and the community that he found in Mexico sounds beautiful. I have found this culture to be present in many other parts of the world as well....very different than the stereotypical neighborhood in the U.S. This, however, is a very complicated issue and it seems that he oversimplifies life in the U.S. as compared to that in Mexico. There are major cultural differences, but are these differences only caused by our value of work? This is not to say that we are not capable or shouldn't learn from Mexicans and their communities, as well as the value placed on people, conversation and lifestyle, however, could this also simply be an ability to relate with others, that is very different than the way we have been raised as Americans?

We are not only affected economically, and by the value we have placed on the dollar but also by upbringing, community structure...the layout of our neighborhoods. etc.

I think that Joe has very clearly identified 2 major differences between the U.S. and our neighbors in Mexico, at least in terms of this particular neighborhood. And he clearly points out that our American culture is missing out on living in the present, knowing our neighbors better than our computer screen. However, I think that he does a poor job of articulating what the causes of this may be, which is far larger than what he is capable of addressing in such a short article.

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It says here you've been missing a lot of work... Well Bob...
Posted by: hughesrg on Nov 3, 2009 9:44 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While it came off a little pretentious and over-simplified, I agree with the gist of Joe's article. I'm truly happy for him, he's doing what he wants, where he wants which is what I think the real point of this article should have been. To say that working being productive is somehow a bad thing isn't quite correct in my opinion. It all depends on what your "work" is and what you're actually "producing", but I do think that America's collective idea's of work and productivity need to re-calibrated. I am lucky in that I "unplugged myself from the Matrix" about 3 years ago at a fairly young age. I originally went to work for the Pharma industry right out of High School and gradually worked my way up the corporate food chain over the course of 13 years holding various first-mid level management positions. After years of pleated khaki's, rotating shifts, crappy meetings, free bagel Fridays, hurry up and wait deadlines and backstabbing office politics I decided to politely bow out and pursue my own thing. Proper attire now consists of jeans, T-shirt and a pair of safety glasses. Meetings now usually involve live music and single malt scotch. I choose when, where and how long I work AND I now get more done in a day and actually PRODUCE something. To me it was the best move I ever made. Doing something I actually love, physically making something and contributing to society... This is what work and productivity should be! This is what life is about!

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Take the gloves off of your terminology.
Posted by: LightningJoe on Nov 5, 2009 3:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our culture has been programmed, for the benefit of those who skim the top twenty percent off of everyone's pie.

Programmed by the big profit interests who drive our media. We've also been given the "masking" dose of programming, that gives us a way to think that we HAVEN'T been programmed. This is the incessant drumbeat of our individual "uniqueness," and the unending encouragement to find our "own" expressions -- all duly sanctioned, or course, by the corporations that sell those expressions to us. And we swallow that lie along with the others because we want so badly to be free that we'll embrace a sufficiently attractive PICTURE OF FREEDOM -- and all in the face of our continued assimilation into a broad "society" of similarly "unique" "individuals."

(The quote marks are key here -- because it's all done with the verbal equivalent of smoke and mirrors -- media and advertisers morph words we know into similar -- but profit-making -- new meanings. Then, when we think the same thoughts that we always have thought, the attached meanings are different, and lead us to different conclusions. Thus "society" now simply means a collection of individuals to us, rather than a cohesive group with common perceptions and goals, who cooperate for common ends. Individual now means one of that collection, but isolated -- even threatened by -- the common interests. Unique no longer means literally one of a kind, but is an dependent, attached "elevator" of the concept of individuality -- as opposed to common, which now has been given socialist or even communistic overtones )

America's ruling myth is that we are each of us going our "own way" in life, without being beholden to any other person, for either their support or approval. The evidence flies in the face of that, but we are so besotted with televised images of our "common uniqueness" that we never see how we are following and swallowing that line, right along with the hook and sinker.

And why does the television tell us such things? Why, because there is BIG money to be made, simply by selling us the things that assuage our gnawing feelings of having had our lives and sovereignty routinely violated by our "own" (now their) culture -- which has become utterly dependent on what the teevee tells us it is. This is why vacations are such a huge industry in this country -- seldom as they can be enjoyed these days. We want nothing more than to "get away from it all," and pretend that we won't have to go back and earn more money, money, money, just to survive another year in the pressure cooker -- with our cooked juices flowing to the best advertisers.

I think our rebellion against our guiding lies is at the root of the deep religious intolerance we see everywhere in America these days. The promoters of the consumer culture can't really deal with the power of religion, though they have tried. Those whose acceptance into the turnover-jobs culture has always been conditioned on forsaking their real cultures, eventually turn to religion for its promised certainties (and, yes, its culture). And the portion of people who get religion for this reason are violently opposed to the acceptance of the standard story of what our country is about. They have to work and eat as we all do, but they reject the base rational for it all; the obtaining of supposed "independence" from others (from others of the same culture, yet).

But "independence" is such a core American myth that even those who reject it, still accept its definition of what is desirable in our lives. Rejecting "independence," or rather the myth of it, feels to us like embracing slavery, because shallow teevee logic defines the choice as a choice between those two extremes. Religionists reject "the world of mammon" but still slave for the independence (and wealth!) that teevee tells them is their birthright as Americans.

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Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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USA doing good
Posted by: richholland on Nov 7, 2009 8:31 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in the sixties the young Napoli fisherman sat repairing his nets, drinking his red wine, eating his pasta.

Then the overweighted, in powerfull hawain shirt, productive, energetic american TOURIST told him ;

young man, start working hard, double shifts, invest money, buy shares.
Why; the young man asked friendly;

Because, because; shouted the american tourist,
then when you are old and retired you can sit in the sun and drink wine...

But that is what I do allready, replied the young man friendly.

The american walked away angry;" those lazy natives, you give them a good advice and they are not gratefull.

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USA is a douchebag
Posted by: americancontragenic on Nov 8, 2009 3:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Spoiled,egocentric,ill informed,designed to be ignorant by those in power,the USA is a nation of idiots who have no idea what is truly going on in the world.I would love to be able to blame those people who are in power for this error but truly they are just opportunists who are able to feed on the laziness and ignorance of it's people. When is the US going to wake up and realize that the world does not exist to service US citizens? We are a nation of Stupid X12!!the complacency that pervades every segment of our society has been engineered by some of the most creative minds of our era.Sad Sad sad, as an atheist I truly wish there were some deity to bitch to.

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thanx 4 speaking truth
Posted by: mandala on Nov 11, 2009 12:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
thanx 4 ur perceptive, clear headed perspective. sad how those who can't see it would rather attack u than rattle their own cages...

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produce or die
Posted by: ML561 on Nov 19, 2009 11:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An interesting article. It seems that in this country our worth is determined by what we produce and what we consume. And how much of what is produced, or consumed, has enduring value?

My concern is that we are returning to the days of slave labor and the "company town" where the corporation owned everything including the right to tell employees where to live, where to shop, and how to live their lives. Look at the creeping anti-smoking policies. It will soon not be enough for the corporations , with the cooperation of state legislatures, to ban smoking from the workplace or its adjacent property. They may soon be able to refuse to hire smokers or demand that employees submit to random tests to make sure they are not smoking. There are proposals to tax overweight people (and what is considered overweight?) or to allow employers either to discriminate against them by not hiring them or by forcing them to go on a corporate-mandated weight reduction program. In short, employers, knowing that in this economy people are desperate for jobs, will put more and more burdens on the workers, to the extent of interfering in their private lives. It's the plantation system all over again. And no one will dare complain, because someone will be there to take their place.

And where the hell are the labor unions? I haven't heard a peep out of them. Either they have lost their interest in the workers or they've gone corrupt, but I would think they would be very vocal about what is happening now.Something is wrong. We need to reclaim our humanity and refuse to be cogs in the machine.

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