Sunday, January 13, 2008

Oldguy Muses About Power

Power is something that has taken me a long time to get a handle on. It may be that I have had something of an aversion to it. Yet I kept coming back around to it in several different ways. Little by little, I’ve begun to get a little grasp of it.

Power has many different forms. For instance, there’s the power of the natural world. We’re well aware of its more extreme forms since they impact us greatly. Events like earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, hurricanes and tornados, ice storms or fire storms like we recently saw in California. Our position in this is of one that has no power to affect these events. We do have power to mitigate the effects on us by using what we have to at least find a way to survive this exercise of natural power.

Then there is social power. This gets played out in a number of ways. We’re all familiar with the political, at least we should be. For most of history we had these high mucky-mucks, who through their use of strong-arm methods of force made us do their bidding. They were known as emperors or kings. Generally their kingdoms and empires were organized in hierarchical fashion, with those higher on the social ladder exercising power over those beneath. It was always the few over the many, with one guy (usually) saying he’s the top dog. Basically, the power relationship was that of the bully and his victim, the dominator paradigm. It took the Enlightenment to begin to overthrow this arrangement, but it hasn’t been eradicated yet, not by a long shot.

Next we have economic power. To continue to live we have to eat food, drink water and have shelter from extreme weather and predators. In our present system, the vast majority of us have to sell our labor and/or our brains for a medium of exchange (money!) that we can in turn exchange for said food, water, and shelter. Prior to this a preferred method was for some folks to own other folks as slaves, whom they forced to do whatever the master wanted, what I like to call the master-slave paradigm. When the industrial revolution hit, wage slavery was the preferred method used by the industrialists and Robber Barons. I’ve read some of the debates by ante-bellum southern senators defending the “peculiar institution” that formed the basis of the economy of the southern states, in which they critiqued the wage-slavery of the north as a worse institution. Frankly, I think they were right on. The employee is in a dependency relationship, in that he/she depends on their paycheck. The only power that the employee has is their labor, to give or to withhold. The employer’s power resides in his control of the transaction. Additionally, he finds an ally in the coercive power of unemployment. If the employee has no income, they cannot continue to live, not being able to purchase their sustenance.

The final power for tonight is the power over people’s immortal souls. The priests insert themselves as the gatekeepers to the spiritual realm, and presumed themselves to speak for some God that all others must obey or face eternal punishments. While the religion may have originally had a spiritual basis rooted in the spiritual experience of the founder, once it became organized empty ritual replaced actual experience, faith (or belief) substituted for the real deal. Once someone gains control of the ability to define everyone’s eternal position, great power is accrued to them.

Well, that’s it for now. Chew on this for a while – we’ll be coming back to these ideas regularly.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Happy New Year 2008

Happy New Year 2008. 2007 was a helluva year. Not as bad as 2006, thank God, and there are good things percolating. So I can’t complain, and as they say, it wouldn’t do any good.

Looking back over the year I can actually be encouraged, because it looks to me that this is the year the Green Movement entered the mainstream. In my field of technology there was the concept that when introducing something really new that people broke down into four parts:

  • The first 10% were pioneers, people that liked and were willing to try new things.
  • The next 35% were called early comers, those that caught on after the pioneers.
  • The next 35% were late comers; when they saw the others they thought, “I guess I’ll do that too.”
  • The last 20% were the never comers, and you didn’t need to concern yourself much with them.

The trick was to move from the 10% pioneers, to the 35% early comers. I think that’s what’s happened with the Green Movement, this is the year that it jumped from the 10% to the 35%. Kudos to Al Gore for almost single-handedly bringing the issue of global warming to the forefront of the global stage. That and a little help from the pictures of the Arctic ice cap melting at an unprecedented rate and the northwest passage becoming reality for the first time in history. Oil hitting a hundred dollars a barrel added an exclamation point.

That’s the good news.

On the other hand we’re stuck with Bush-Cheney and the Neocons for another year to see how much damage they can do to our country. I’m holding my breath until the next election. Sadly, I’m half afraid we might not get to vote these guys out of office, and the other half afraid it’s all rigged by the computers anyway (as a computer professional, I don’t trust those things one bit, pun intended).

The credit crisis precipitated by the subprime debacle could be the stone that tips things such that they cannot get out of it, and serious recession or depression here we come. The dollar is crashing overseas, which means prices will be rising. American companies are being bought by foreign firms at record levels. Bankruptcies and foreclosures and the gap between rich and poor are at the highest levels since the Great Depression, This isn’t the country I grew up in. It’s all due to conservative policies, beginning with Ronnie Reagan, and on through Bush the First, Clinton, and Bush Junior.

So, in all, looking ahead to 2008, I’m reminded of the immortal Betty Davis, “Hang onto your hats, boys. It’s going to be a bumpy ride.”

Then again, what do I know. I hope 2008 is your best year ever. It’s a whole new one. Do with it what you will.