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Aquarian Weekly 5/5/10
REALITY CHECK
G-R-E-E-D
Humanity's Case Against Financial Reform
I
tried to break the spell--the heavy, mute spell of the wilderness--that
seemed to draw him to its pitiless breast by the awakening of
forgotten and brutal instincts, by the memory of gratified and
monstrous passions.
- Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness
Two
men watch as two wolves struggle for survival. The first wolf
is kindness, the other is greed. One man asks, 'Which wolf will
triumph?' The other smiles and says; "The one I fed."
- Native American Proverb
The
principle hazard of the columnist trade is its guarantees of repetition.
The aim is to take a fresh angle to arguments or unfolding current
events and spin them in a readable and oft times, hopefully, convincing
manner. We do none of that here. Repetition to the point of revulsion
is our practice. You would be correct in assuming it something
of an art form. It may be presented in various and mainly vulgar
and chaotic ways, but it is nonetheless the same tired crap.
For
nearly fourteen years now, the Reality Check News & Information
Desk has regurgitated one particular point -- whether dealing
with politics, social issues, pop culture, art, music, sports,
or civilization's frailties and triumphs -- that human nature
is what it is, and no matter how one wishes, hopes, even prays
to alter it through speeches, protests, laws and other tawdry
over-reaching miasma, it remains human nature.
And
nothing in the realm of human nature is as strongly defined, nurtured,
and set alight than greed.
Freud
and his minions would argue sex, and others of a more spiritual
slant would cite love, but they are both way off. Love & Sex are
emotional offshoots of greed. From the moment a child latches
onto a breast for milk or grabs some inanimate object and attaches
a sense of self-esteem and comfort to it, irrationally blurting,
"Mine!" thus begins a sense of entitlement and destiny engendered
in a spirit yearning to breath free. It is nothing more than greed;
pure, unblemished, and groaning with hormones.
Egalitarian
all-for-one-and-one-for-all concepts are unnatural. Sharing; the
most selfless act we teach our youth, is unnatural. Do you share
your spouse? Maybe, if there is a special arrangement and it's
kind of your thing, but mostly, you don't. You also don't share
your home, but for a few days or a room or two, or your car or
your bank account, unless it is part of another spousal arrangement,
and so on. These are possessions granted as such by a free society.
It is the blessed freedom to build ownership, but, alas, also
the freedom to lose it.
This
is the beauty of America; in all its horror and glory. The liberty
bestowed on our human nature, unbeknownst to generations of peoples
from all over the globe, allows us to find out about ourselves.
This has led to terrific progress, greatness, and societal evolution;
well documented in volumes of U.S. history, and it stands to reason
that the no-so flattering elements are also part of that history.
It
is a history built on the freedom to break it all down to one
common denominator; greed. A bunch of British landowners wanting
to gain ownership of property -- a word denoting greed -- carved
out of the wilderness. Period. Basically, the Declaration of Independence
is a 1,338 word hosanna to "Mine"! This country's entire formation,
foundation, and evolution in a brutally and furiously free nature,
is all about G-r-e-e-d.
Its
ultimate manifestation is Wall St.; the speculation of trade,
commerce and economic fluidity; where the everyman to the titan
can take his most precious commodities and send them adrift on
a wing and a prayer, striving for fortune with a modicum of fear
it may disappear in a puff of smoke. And if the art form of the
columnist is repetition, then those who call Wall St. home deal
in prognostication, and all the manipulation and subterfuge that
comes with it. Guess work. Con artistry. The enticement of the
gamble -- the definitive greed high.
A
risky place to play with human nature, but one built on it most
primeval form. It beats in us, as a heart of darkness.
Certain
members of our society, some in the media, and others in our churches
and most in a civic capacity, tend to separate human nature from
our institutions. It is an easy target, mainly because institutions
are so prevalent. It is simpler to cast generalities upon subjects
we don't like and ignore the diametrically opposed equation when
something we do like is attacked in the very same fashion. This
allows for human nature to define, for instance, something like
Wall St. bankers or massive investment firms with their cloudy
vernacular and inside jargon, as an evil conglomerate.
Of
course this is nonsense. Evil is just an intangible quality we
attach to shit that doesn't work in our favor. It is used against
us when those in opposition want to paint us with the same broad
stroke, whether al Qaeda or some other ridiculous palaver, as
we in turn use it to wipe them out.
If
anything, Wall St. and everything it stands for is based solely
and completely, and I dare say, uncompromisingly on our inherent
lust for greed.
Make
no mistake about it, Wall St. exists because people want to make
money, not advance society or observe moral obligations, or serve
the greater good. Sometimes these ideas happen as a consequence
of "making money", but more times than not, it's the bottom line.
Its aim is to feed the greed, and use our freedom to grab the
brass ring in any way, shape or form it can.
But
then when those freedoms are "abused", as in the case with much
of the crazed feeding frenzy that sank the economic solvency of
the Western World in late 2008, whether it's massive banks or
irresponsible investment gurus, a fantasy housing market or other
tried-and-true free market scams, the ensuing outcry rings a tad
hypocritical.
Do
people take their assumingly hard-earned cash and dump it into
a system to buoy the spirit of humankind or prop up the economic
structure of its people at large? Or do they do it to grow it
for a sense of financial security -- another buzzword for greed.
Big
dividends/Big losses; all part of the free market society, which
explores the very nature of our being. But people being people,
we love the former part of the equation and the latter not so
much. If the latter happens then things must be regulated and
controlled and goddamn it people have to go to jail for acting
like...well. acting like us, only on a much wilder and wholly
criminal way, of course.
I've
recently heard an alarming number of our citizenry, from the president
to many pundits and politicians claim that the free market system
does not exclusively subsist for greed, that it is not some bizarrely
massive casino, and that somehow the freedom to make scratch is
outweighed by the thorny issue of losing one's shirt.
This
is gobbledygook, like vapid yakking about Founding Fathers and
American Spirit and Shining Cities on Hills.
Freedom,
really true freedom, allows for human nature to run its course,
and to regulate, castigate and investigate its ambitions runs
counter to our own nature, the nature to grab and hold and keep
away from others.
Like
what I told the jeering throng at the NJ TEA Party Tax Day extravaganza
two weeks ago; if you really want freedom, true American, unhinged
freedom, be prepared to have a stark and yawning chasm between
winners and losers, survivors and victors.
Financial
Reform?
Good
luck.
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