Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Paul Grinnell's avatar

I think we have grown accustomed to calling it a democracy since that is what it was supposed to be. Its current iterations are far more of a technocracy. Being so intimately immersed and enmeshed within it has made it difficult for us to recognize the changes, especially since the end of the second WW, as they have unfolded in service of agendas other than the common good. And while we have, for the most part, been manipulated in to believing and behaving as we do in support of ‘the machine’, that doesn’t relieve us of our complicity, acquiescence, and complacent attitude and will, in all likelihood, make change very difficult to achieve without it being forced in some catastrophic way.

Old habits, as they say, die hard, and our collective favouritism for comfort and convenience, and our willingness to outsource a lot of our decision making to marketing and the technocracy, means that the necessary change will be extremely difficult and lengthy. Lots of the steps to that change are already being co-opted and monetized, sadly, which only exacerbates the problem further.

I am increasingly of the belief that for solidly-rooted change to happen, space must be opened up for it to grow and flourish organically. We must re-establish a deeper and well grounded meaning in our lives that is fully detached from, again, ‘the machine’, and solidifies a new and collective set of values to underpin such a culture.

If you have not already, I do strongly recommend watching this from the Consilience Project ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6V0qmDZ2gg ) Yes, it is 3 + hours long, but it is filled with insight and thought provocation and, I feel, some rough mapping of how we can begin the necessary process of change. I’m on my third pass through it. There is a transcript as well ( https://consilienceproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/TRANSCRIPT_-The-Psychological-Drivers-of-the-Metacrisis.pdf ).

Expand full comment
Jon B's avatar

No civilisation in history ever voluntarily dismantled itself. That goes even more so for the current global, technological one based on fossil fuels. Power structures just don't work like that. It's going to die, alright, but it will die badly, taking most of us with it, unfortunately.

The real question is whether it does so before or after the biosphere is totally destroyed. If it's the former, a small remnant may be able to carry on.

Expand full comment
17 more comments...

No posts