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howardpark

Last seen: 22 months ago

Howard is a guy from Sunnyvale, California, USA

After teaching 7 years at one of the "worst" public high schools in L.A., I am now a founding member of the history department at King's Academy, Amman, Jordan. "To know what is right and not to do it is the worst cowardice."

  • Thorstein Veblen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Rated May 01 2007 1 review economics, sociology wikipedia.org

    "... the luxuries of civilization satisfy only those wants which they themselves create." (Apsley Cherry-Garrard, The Worst Journey in the World)

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    Back in the day, people looked forward to the 21st century as a time when problems like starvation and poverty would be ancient history. They assumed that those problems existed only because of natural scarcity and would soon be solved by advancing technology. Obviously, they were wrong. They forgot that the people who control the technology have better things to do than help billions of suffering human beings. They have money to make, and that means maintaining scarcity even in the midst of the most fabulous abundance.

    Later on, but still back in the day, people looked forward to the 21st century as a time when poor workers would solve the problems of starvation and poverty by rising up against those who did no work themselves but claimed to own the things needed for work (land, factories, etc.). They assumed that the working class would realize they were being exploited by the "owning" class, and that they wouldn't tolerate a social system designed to protect and glorify the exploiters. Obviously, they too were wrong. But why? Why didn't the workers overthrow and abolish the "owners" for good?

    Thorstein Veblen answered this question in The Theory of the Leisure Class by making a critical observation about societies in which some members parasitize others: "... these societies were not only rich enough to be able to afford a nonproductive class, but aggressive enough to admire them; far from being regarded as wasters or spoilers, those who rose to the leisured ranks were looked up to as the strong and the able. As a consequence, a fundamental change in attitudes toward work took place. The activities of the leisure class--the winning of wealth by force--came to be regarded as honorific and dignified. Hence, by contrast, pure labor became tainted with indignity....

    "The lower classes are not at swords' points with the upper; they are bound up with them by the intangible but steely bonds of common attitudes. The workers do not seek to displace their managers; they seek to emulate them. They themselves acquiesce in the general judgment that the work they do is somehow less 'dignified' than the work of their masters, and their goal is not to rid themselves of a superior class but to climb up to it. In the theory of the leisure class lies the kernel of a theory of social stability." (Robert L. Heilbroner, The Worldly Philosophers)

    As long as the poor aspire to be just like the rich--just as pampered, just as wasteful, just as materialistic--there can never be a true revolution against economic injustice.
    Thorstein Veblen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • Bullish on War

    Rated Apr 24 2007 7 reviews economics, iraq conflict bullnotbull.com

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    As the debate over our military occupation of Iraq continues, some supporters have been reduced to the following justification: "How do you tell the family of the last soldier killed in Iraq that he died for nothing?" By this logic (I use that term loosely), whenever we make a mistake involving human lives, we should refuse to change course and keep on making the same mistake forever. It's as if doctors who had been prescribing a certain drug were to discover that it ended up killing their patients. According to the argument above, they should keep prescribing the drug anyway, because "how do you tell the family of the last patient killed that he died for nothing?" Those who cling to this excuse are saying, in essence, that it is better to sacrifice more human lives than to admit a mistake. It's sheer stubborn stupidity.

    Even on a purely emotional level, the "last soldier" idea holds no water. The tragedy is not that the soldier was killed last, but that he died for nothing. Having more soldiers die for nothing doesn't reduce the tragedy in any way. Does anyone seriously imagine that a dead soldier's family will take even the slightest consolation in the news that somebody else was killed after him? Compared to the enormity of death, the position of the death in a sequence of deaths seems to me an obscenely trivial concern, one that exemplifies how puny the justifications for this conflict really are.

    The sad truth is that the first, the last, and all of the soldiers killed in Iraq have died for nothing. "Nothing" is the only word that adequately describes the amount of realistic thought that went into the invasion. "Nothing" is what our country will get out of this colossal waste of blood and treasure. Actually, "less than nothing" is more accurate: our enemies have been strengthened beyond their wildest dreams, our allies (or should I say our former allies) have been weakened and angered to the point that they no longer want to cooperate with us, and the general mayhem and distraction have allowed Osama bin Laden and Kim Jong-Il to go on giving us the middle finger with impunity for the last four years. The only Americans who have gained from all of this are the "defense" contractors who were shrewd enough to cultivate such close personal and financial relationships with Bush and Cheney. For them, the occupation of Iraq is like a giant funnel leading directly from the pockets of the American taxpayers into their own. Perhaps that's why Bush is so dead-set on staying in Iraq.

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    Bullish on War
  • Politics Explained
  • http://www.manbottle.com/humor/capitalism_and_cows