Thursday, July 7, 2011

Society is a funny construct

Just look at all the stuff we spend our time doing.

Over the last few hundred years, we've become less and less involved with producing real things. From making thread by hand to a spinning jenny to vast machines - first powered by water, then by electricity - and likewise from doing this manufacturing in every home, to outside the town, to certain regions within a country... to the other side of the world entirely.

Think about that. Each time we've been able to do more, it's become "more expensive". It's completely backward logic.

The same is true with food - from a person farming on their own, then with horses or oxen, to mechanised tractors capable of doing more work in an hour than a man could in a day, a week, a year.

It's true - the relative cost of food has come down. In the West, our expenditure on food is something like 10% of our income, rather than 30%.

But what, then, do we do? Unemployment is high because the machines have taken the work (this is a cry from down the ages - there were protests and violent opposition to the industrial revolution), and some suggest we work for the machines rather than them working for us.

There is so much "supporting" work now - providing a service for someone, several steps removed from a real thing. Or the "real thing" of the work being done taking a back seat to the administration - for example, this story relates that the Canadian Cancer Society spends just 22% of the money is raises on research into cancer.

Making 78% spent on marketing, administration, IT, etc, etc.

I could envisage a much more sensible society, where the Important Things in life are taken care of first (Food, Water, Housing, Heating; Education; Healthcare; Environmental Preservation) - after that, go for broke.

But surely, every last child should be fed, warm, and healthy before we go on holiday, or buy that 60" TV?

(I'm not suggesting I'm a saint that donates all my money to food banks; I feel strongly that the government should be able to provide these things to all, perhaps in exchange for labour or something. I also know that such programmes have historically led to abuse and misuse of funds).

I guess the issue is that we're a funny, ingenious, self-absorbed, clever bunch, and this seems to be a way that works - most people are safe, fed, educated. Over time we in the West can only hope that those parts, at least, of what we currently enjoy can spread to all.

I do feel that pushing a far higher proportion of people into spending at least a few years of their life growing food would be beneficial. As an alternative to university, perhaps - small scale agriculture, animal husbandry (which is a funny term if ever I saw one!), and the like.

I just don't understand the point of working in an office, except as a means to earn money to pay for the things that would be much better earned by growing/making them onesself.

The frustration, of course, is the cost of land. We are slaves (yes, I do mean that seriously - we have a choice but so very very few people are aware there are options other than to get a desk job, these days) to our mortgages, loans, credit cards; and mostly to our habits.

Me included. Move to the country, write books, grow food. Easy. Except I'm doing a desk job, saving up to buy a piece of land and figuring out how on earth I'll support myself if I really *do* stop with the office job.

It's a conundrum. And I don't want help in the form of a business loan, a commitment to something I cannot control.

Freedom... elusive, but very desirable. My freedom - different from your freedom, no doubt.

Could I make a country based on my ideals? Say - yes, UK/France/Canada, your system works - for you. I want to take this piece of land and live a different way - no hospitals, no taxes, no mandatory insurance. Just some books, a wood stove, some chickens...

I feel that a country should support its population. That we should live happy lives enabled by that country, rather than despite it.

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