The Big Ideas of 2012

Post Cool

Carving up the new frontier of style.
Post Cool

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Audio version read by George Atherton – Right-click to download

Cool’s original power had derived from its formative role in forging a modern personality type, a style of engagement – indirect, ironic, flexible, infused with humor, sometimes flippant – that was adopted with success by a growing percentage of the population.

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But the relentless mass marketing of cool has tainted this style of behavior and made it seem inauthentic or contrived to a growing number of individuals. It is almost inconceivable that anything could happen, at this late stage, that would restore to cool the freshness and vitality it possessed in the fifties and sixties.

Of course, the old-school cool ethos will not disappear completely. Even when some color or fabric is passé, it still finds its way into our wardrobe. But cool now lacks conviction and energy. Above all, its economic force is diminishing. And this, more than anything, will accelerate its decline. One busy cash register is worth more than a thousand pundits. The arbiters of taste – at record labels, in films and TV, in consumer marketing, in media – will respond to these economic shifts rather than lead them. But follow they must, or disappear from the scene. Their successors will not make the same mistakes. Over time, this will transform even the last institutional bastions of cool into promoters of the postcool worldview.

One of the most interesting spectacles of postcool society will involve the dominant forces of the old paradigm scrambling to co-opt the new one. Packaged and slick and phony will attempt to become down-home and natural and authentic. We can see this playing out in many arenas – from music to clothing, politics to daily news. But let us take one sector of our economy and show how this works.

In consumer food products the postcool celebration of the natural and authentic is spelled out in the recent dramatic growth in the sale of organic fruits and vegetables, vitamin supplements, antibiotic-and-hormone-free beef, and other products that previously existed only on the fringes of the food industry. Of course this trend spells trouble for packaged-food multinationals, who are the real losers here. How do they respond? In the postcool society, representatives of the old paradigm imitate the new one. So we have the Naked Juice company, with its line of 100 percent natural, unsweetened beverages … but it’s owned by Pepsi.

The registered slogan of this company is “Nothing to Hide” – but one thing is clearly hidden in its marketing campaigns: its connection with PepsiCo Inc. Visit the Naked Juice website, and see if you can find the name of the parent company anywhere. Goodluck! Then again, Naked Juice needs to deal with its competitor Odwalla, a leader in all-natural juices … owned by Coca-Cola.

Next stop on your itinerary, please visit the website for Dagoba, a company committed to the highest quality organic chocolate, and see if you can find any mention of parent company Hershey. But Mars Inc., maker of M&M’s and Snickers, has gone even further, acquiring Seeds of Change, which sells more than six hundred types of 100 percent organically grown seeds. And we have the Back to Nature brand of cereal and granola … but it is now owned by Kraft foods, makers of Cheez Whiz and Velveeta. Heinz, through its minority position in Hain Celestial, has an equity share in dozens of natural brands. I could cite countless other examples. In fact, almost every major purveyor of packaged, processed food loaded with preservatives and various chemicals is trying to position itself as a champion of healthy, natural eating.

But the fascinating angle here is how well hidden these relationships are. In the old days, Hershey would make sure everyone knew they were involved when they sold chocolate. After all, what could be a better endorsement for confections than the Hershey brand name? Or Coca-Cola’s for beverages? Or Pepsi’s? These companies have invested billions of dollars in building and enhancing the value of their brand names. Pepsi alone has purchased celebrity endorsements at untold cost from Britney Spears, Mariah Carey, P!nk, Christina Aguilera, Michael Jackson, Janet Jackson, David Beckham, David Bowie, Shakira, Jackie Chan, Halle Berry, Jennifer Lopez, Tina Turner, Justin Timberlake, Beyonce Knowles, Mary J. Blige, the Spice Girls, Ray Charles, and many, many others. Yet now this company needs to conceal its involvement in the fastest-growing segments of the beverage market? What gives? We see the same old shift in field after field – music, media, consumer products, retailing, politics, fashion, academia, the internet, almost everywhere you look. Organizations that have spent decades investing in their image, their brand, their logo, now admit that it’s best to junk all that and start with a clean sheet of paper.

This paradox will become part of the day-to-day life in postcool society. Even if postcool celebrates the real and authentic, the simple and down to earth, it doesn’t mean that these attributes will actually dominate public life. Instead we will find a grand charade of phony pretending to be authentic, of contrived acting as though it is real, the intricately planned putting on the mask of the simple and unaffected. In many instances, postcool will just be the same folks who brought you cool, hiding behind a mask.

But this faux postcool will increasingly be forced to compete with the real thing. Grassroots movements will be built around the core postcool values of simplicity, authenticity, naturalness and earnestness. These will flourish outside the market place, in public and private discourse, shaping attitudes and interpersonal relations. True, they will have an economic impact, but their significance will not be reducible to dollars and cents. Postcool will inhabit people’s psyches long before it takes control of their wallets.

This core distinction will be our chief guide in distinguishing the phony corporate maneuverings from the real grassroots changes that will drive postcool society. The former will always inhabit a product or service. And if the cool was a friend to business, seeing its own destiny in accessories and gadgets, the postcool will have a more ambivalent relationship with the prevailing economic interests. The new ethos does not require expensive new accessories and often will take positive delight in downscaling lifestyles and paring back on unneeded extras.

Simplicity, authenticity, naturalness and earnestness … I mentioned these as though they were parts of a product positioning exercise. But in fact they will be in the foundations of the postcool personality type. Just as the cool was at its best when internalized as a way people acted and not just trumpeted as a marketing message, so will postcool have its greatest impact as a way people instinctively deal with situations and circumstances. In a book such as this, the examples gathered inevitably come from things that can be seen, heard, touched, measured – in short, what we call empirical evidence. But don’t let that fool you into thinking that these are the primary signs of the new postcool era. Many of the most salient changes will be those that we can grasp only indirectly and will not be measurable with any exactitude by statisticians and pollsters.

For the same reason, postcool will be less fickle and changeable than cool. Postcool is not just another style, another trend. It is the antithesis of style, of trendiness. And because it reflects an emerging personality type and not a passing fashion, postcool will probably be around for quite a while. Many merchants of cool will be tempted to dismiss or misinterpret postcool, seeing its key elements as a new, marketable lifestyle, as just one more way of being cool. We can already see many examples of this shortsighted behavior. But ultimately the attempt to treat postcool as just another variant on cool will fail.

For 50 years, the prevailing tone has been focused outward. Cool was in the eyes of the beholder, and those who lived by its principles needed constantly to be attuned to what others were thinking and doing. As trends and fashions and languages changed, the cool cats had to change as well … or risk being left behind. And even though good guys are expected to finish last, according to the adage, cool cats are not allowed to bring up the rear. The cool was a demanding deity, requiring its adherents to keep up with the times, to maintain a retinue of admirers. But postcool, by nature inward focused and self-directed, will not be so easily budged. From now on, the game will be played by different rules.

Postcool will be more intense than cool. Higher strung. More determined and less easily deflected and distracted. For this reason, many parties will strive to win the allegiance of this rapidly growing constituency. Political candidates will build their campaigns to appeal to the new psyche. Marketers will position products to maximize their perceived value to this demographic. Social movements and churches and media will all try to attract them. Who wouldn’t want these assertive, strong-willed folks in their camp? But the challenges involved in securing their support should not be minimized. The postcool person is not a belonger, not a follower. As Arnold Mitchell discovered when he first identified this group in the seventies – when it was just a tiny subset of the American public, maybe one or two percent by his measure – these individuals are the hardest to market to … because by their nature they are suspicious of marketing and resistant to its methods.

As a result, the postcool society will be full of surprises. The scene will be marked by unexpected grassroots activities that come to the fore despite the best-laid plans of politicians and corporate execs. Exciting? Perhaps. Dangerous and volatile? Certainly at times.

Of course, even postcool may sow the seeds of its own eventual decline. A new personality type lasts longer than a passing fashion, but even deep-seated character patterns and emotional styles can outlive their usefulness. Just as the cool personality became less effective over time, postcool could find itself replaced by some yet-to-be defined paradigm. We can already see postcool’s vulnerability in its unstable reliance on bluntness and aggression, its susceptibility to anger and confrontation. When so much irritability and adversarial posturing permeate our national and local lives, won’t this breed another reaction in time, a new cooling down of the temperature and the emergence of consensus building and a softer, gentler emotional style in public and private life?

But old-school cool will not come back. The cool is dead … at least as we knew it back in the second half of the 20th century. If aspects of it still hold center stage from time to time, they will do so because they have adapted to the new state of affairs. As with all passing movements, the age of cool will inspire nostalgia and retain a few adherents, those folks who always look back dreamily at the past, lamenting the loss of the good ol’ days. But the future belongs to a different personality type and hard-nosed assertiveness. It’s like everything Mom and Dad told you is finally coming true … only now you will be hearing it from your own children.

Ted Gioia writes on music, literature and contemporary culture. He is the author of eight books, including The History of Jazz, Delta Blues and The Birth (and Death) of the Cool.

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I agree that these

by arthurkukri on December 22 2011, @10:48 am

I agree that these multi-nationals won't really be able to coopt the success of some movements, but others are easily exploited. Some will have to coexist.

Grass-fed beef is an example of the first scenerio. Grass-fed beef is probably one of the healthiest foods on the planet. Period. Even the fat is loaded with the good, inflamation reducing Omega-3 fats (just like salmon). But you can only put so many cows on so many acres of pasture. Corporations could never produce the amount of beef raised on pasture to meet the demands of our culture. That's not to say it's not possible to do, just not from a corporate model. If people bought their meat from a local farmer in bulk once a year and put it in a chest freezer, it could be possible to get everyone on grass-fed beef. The farmer cuts out the corporation.

The example of real juice being marketed by pepsi is good for the second scenerio. Another would be Truvia. It's now known that insulin boosting foods like so-called "healthy whole grians" (which are NOT healthy) and sugar boost the level of glucose in the blood. This in turn boosts insulin. Chronically elevated levels of insulin in the blood lead to metabolic syndrome (heart disease, obesity, diabetes, hypertension) and so the goal in eating if you don't want any of these nasty diseases of civilization would be to avoid insulin boosting foods. People are using Stevia now. A natural sweetener made from south-american leaf extracts. But Stevia is bitter in higher amounts, so if you like you coffee sweet then stevia isn't the answer. Enter Cargil. This uber-corporation found a way to extract the "sweet" from Stevia and sell it. Now the paleo people (including my wife) are using it because it achieves the goal without the bitter taste.

A good example of the last one would be barbell training. People who've read the book "Starting Stength" now know why strength training machines at gyms such as the Missouri City TX LA Fitness don't really work in the real world with average people. They switch to proper barbell training (squats, presses, deadlifts) and they see amazing changes in their bodies FAST. This is because the body likes to work together, not in isolation. Anyway, people are joining these super gyms because they need someone to watch the kids while they work out on a daily basis, but they just train with barbells in the middle of a globo-gym. This is how the underground movements and super-corporations mix together in semi-harmony.

Here is my idea the coming

by man from the west on December 21 2011, @01:25 pm

Here is my idea the coming year:

Jubilee 2012

Let's Prove the Mayans We're Right Afterall

Universal Forgiveness of Debt for Everyone

December 21, 2012

A lot of these comments are

by Anon on December 20 2011, @01:16 pm

A lot of these comments are focused on the food examples the author used... ??

Personally, the paragraph below really resonates with me and summarizes the main idea behind this cultural shift.

"But postcool, by nature inward focused and self-directed, will not be so easily budged. From now on, the game will be played by different rules."

You withdrew my criticism of

by Anonymous on December 20 2011, @11:21 am

You withdrew my criticism of your magazine, what gives? If you can criticize the corporate stuff, which i also think is bad, then why can't people criticize you? It makes us all stronger in the end. Just to reiterate; you guys seem to be perpetually regurgitating the same themes over and over and over and it makes me bored, like watching repeats of Simpsons. Its a form of cultural asphyxiation because it prevents fresh ideas from recognition. Please stop Please stop Please stop Please stop Please stop Please stop Please stop Please stop Please stop; just in case the request wasn't noticed the first time

Maybe you should ask yourself

by Mariachi Commandos on December 21 2011, @06:43 pm

Maybe you should ask yourself why you require a diet built on novelty. Aren't you part of the problem?

Anybody using money in the

by Anonymous on December 22 2011, @09:40 am

Anybody using money in the western world is part of the problem (for the most part). I've been hearing exactly the same rhetoric for 3+ generations now, dressed up as literature or theatre or music or some cultural bastion and it hasn't been having any significant impact except to make the consumers of those bastions feel more enlightened and therefore; satiated. It is my belief that the G-8 protests don't work anymore; those news bites are expected to show up and thats all they are now, it's time to move on and rethink the approach because its intended effect simply isn't happening. The same with Adbusters and all those other bastions of enlightenment; today's media consuming culture simply includes it along with the cyclic nature of the rest of the entertainment ether then forgets it. If all there is to look forward to is a rehash of cycled themes over and over... then at least we don't have to worry about changing the way we do things because we want to be against the exact same shit next gen, right? Thats why my diet is built on novelty. In your world it's; G-8 protest, G-8 protest, G-8 protest, In my world it's; G-8 protest, G-8 protest, occupy wall St, ...? Somebody please find a different way to do this stuff! After all; I <3 novelty.

cool, swell, groovy, builds

by kip.durocher on December 18 2011, @06:37 pm

cool, swell, groovy, builds strong bones, neat, healthy, organic,
certified organic ~ all ~ repeat all ~ madison avenue bull shit
chevy volt - sales gimmick
My favorite. John D Rockefeller's manager told him they would need to
buy 500 acres of land to store the sludge left over when they refined crude
to gas. Rockefeller said " Give me a day to talk to the Madison Avenue
boys." (the advertising men) They came up with a plan to bottle the slop
and convince Americans to smear it on themselves.
No money spent on land - more profit selling waste.
We still buy it - Pertoleum Jelly~ no use at all.

Where did you get any of that

by What? on December 19 2011, @02:12 pm

Where did you get any of that information on Petroleum Jelly? It's pure rubbish! I laughed literally out loud and showed other people around my house!

Your igornance is not a

by kip.durocher on December 21 2011, @08:39 pm

Your igornance is not a concern of mine.
Your mind is rubbish.
You showed it to "all the people you live with."0
Do you live in a group home for tards?

this is a more thought

by dghjfhkfhjflkka on December 17 2011, @06:05 pm

this is a more thought provoking article than may appear on first glance.

i think what you're describing is actually a generational shift from the boomers to some kind of x-derived concept of punk rock. post-cool sounds exactly like punk to me.

has it been the norm, though, at least since the early 90s? well, amongst young people; i'm arguably not young anymore. yet, the marketing apparatus has stayed boomer all this time, hasn't it? the shifts have been more technological than substantial.

What if-- what if-- bear with

by Anonymous on December 17 2011, @05:00 pm

What if-- what if-- bear with me-- Naked and Odwalla are actually sort of like parasites taking over the host body of PepsiCo and Coca-Cola-- using the host to propagate the "good" virus of organic foods? What will happen when everyone is drinking more Naked and Odwalla than Pepsi and Coke? Won't that be a victory of sorts? What do you want-- for everyone to be healthy, or for everyone to be "cool"?

Ahh, I don't think, nor agree

by Anonymous on December 16 2011, @06:26 pm

Ahh, I don't think, nor agree with the notion that [cool] is litany of associable sentiments. Cool is dead, like God, Santa, and the Fairy Tooth. It was a temporary, and now well self-dissolved, dimension of conservatism, perilously toxified with romantic sprinkles, that faded into its own spectacular simulation of substance. Please don't pretend about cool, or Cool. It was destructive and backward. Good riddance to bad rubbish.

The example of organic foods

by Anonymous on December 16 2011, @04:18 pm

The example of organic foods and the neologism of "postcool" are an entirely ill-matched fit. Pepsi and Coke, et al. are doing what they've always done: sell products. They remove their brand their healthier subsidiaries because people have a negative stigma associated with brands like Pepsi, which they associate with junk.

If the food is actually healthy, or organic, then I fail to see how they're involved in a "grand charade of phony pretending to be authentic, of contrived acting as though it is real, the intricately planned putting on the mask of the simple and unaffected'.

By replying to consumer demand for a product they're doing what they've always done: sell products. Accusing of them insincerity and deploying the term "postcool" is rather missing the point surrounding debates against capital and reductive to an extreme.

And finally, as a sociological phenomenon, it's entirely possible that people used to being "attuned to what others were thinking and doing" will now attempt to appear "simple, genuine, authentic". What a stunningly self-evident point. It's also entirely uninteresting.

As well, this article contains quite a lot of prophesying about the future, who it belongs to, what will remain dead and what's likely to change. A bit preposterous.

Doing what they have always

by .fRITZ on December 16 2011, @06:09 pm

Doing what they have always done is the key issue here! these corporations own every fascet of our lives and have been given the same rights that we The People hold. I implore you to consider the gravity of this current state of affairs. Pepsi, Coke and Hershey are simply the tip of the iceberg.. start looking into other corporations like Monsanto, or Glencore (http://youtu.be/u6rSBifsvwg). If you dont see this as an issue- then i am afraid they have won you over.

If the food is actually

by Anonymous on December 16 2011, @07:30 pm

If the food is actually healthy and organic then what is the problem? This example simply does not fit with the theme of this article. Ultimately, so what if people are eating a name brand as long as its healthy, especially considering the enormous health problems that this country faces. Yes, better options, such as buying local, exist. I simply think that this was a poor example for this article to use.

I see it as a fine and

by .fRITZ on December 17 2011, @04:42 pm

I see it as a fine and fragile line.
The point is: they are coat tailing on counter culuture so as to be able to continue to do what the have always done... counter-culture came to be in opposition to the 'cool" norm- seemingly there is little/no escape when they are continuously aiming to redefine us to their benifiet.
Healthy drinks are one thing- but even look into clothing trends. we have Levi using revloutionary romantisism and Buckowski poems to sell their jeans- and it has become a trend to look "hobo-chique" when marketers realized that youth were shopping at good-will and wearing keffiyeh's. Nothing is sacred to them and all is profitable.. thats my issue- dont get me wrong- i love naked juice, layers and sweet scarves.. but I hate the idea that these corporations pull at our heart strings while aiming for our pockets.

Just drink water.

by Roberto on December 17 2011, @08:53 pm

Just drink water.

OWS FILM FESTIVAL - Sat.,

by Anonymous on December 16 2011, @03:32 pm

OWS FILM FESTIVAL - Sat., DEC. 17th
7-9PM @56 WALKER STREET
One block South Canal St. Between Church & Broadway

Join the Occupy Revolution! For an exciting film festival that
celebrates 3 months of the Occupation Movement and a global
revolution. See short films from local and international occupation
movement filmmakers and media activists. Witness the inspiration and
defiance of a movement that refuses to be crushed by police brutality
and State repression. You may not see OWS in the corporate media,
But you will see it represented on this Saturday.

Take any train to Canal Street. Please submit any works, links, suggestions, or
volunteer!!! (Co-sponsered by INN World Report) FOR MORE INFO Contact:
occupyrevolution@yahoo.com

Build yourself don't break

by Anonymous on December 16 2011, @10:23 am

Build yourself don't break yourself. No Money, Stocks, Gold, Materialism, Bombs, Guns, Batons, or Tasers Required. Care about yourself, Care about each other. Depend on yourself, Depend on each other to take care of things.
You don't need to vote if you don't want to. And I won't as long as it's about all the above said.
Strangely, it's the thing that wasn't required of us in the Constitution that protects us partly from all the BS when it's all said and done. No I will not participate in this and help you and I have that right!
You don't need to be anti-government. Just do what you believe.
I don't believe in voting for people who believe that Wall Street deserved the BAIL OUT and are unwilling to put pressure that something be done about it immediately before they are even in office or if they are in office.
You want the people to listen to you? Start listening to the people.
They are out there in the streets asking for your help.
This is why I am not at your door hollering at you, and begging for you to help.
This is why I am so hard for you to hear. You have made the American people believe they can't do anything without you. Without the FED. It's terrible... Congress has some Americans believing, you don't have a voice without them to fight your battles...
But Finance, Money, Gold, Stocks, Fancy Suits, and Fancy Cars. Bombs, Oil, and tremendous world power do not make this country. Do not protect this country. If anything they make it more vulnerable to attacks by those extremists who believe that this is what America is about and how we operate.
The hard work, values, belief in freedom, opportunity, and the right to pursue happiness are what the American People are about. The compassion to help those in need and be vigilant of human and social injustices that occur and work to end them, and have people overcome them, are what our country is about. CIVIL RIGHTS. Civility. Compassion for people. Respect.
The American People who demand Congress and the President do something about Wall Street and the Bail Out and are not willing to be silent. The American people who say "Our Country is about Far More than Money" It's about a whole way of life, for families and their children across the world.
Keep it up Patriots. Write your Letters. Let your voices Your First Amendment Right granted by the founders of this very nation be heard. And if it makes you feel good "More Cowbell."

Cool is learning new things.

by Anonymous on December 16 2011, @09:28 am

Cool is learning new things. Cool is being happy just looking at a human face. Cool is being free of influence. Cool is making your own culture. Cool is caring about things. Cool is replying. Cool is the silence as snow falls all around you. Cool is waking up today. Cool is both of us being here. Cool is you not knowing me, but meeting me here. Cool is not knowing who you are, but loving you because you are Life. Cool is knowing how important this moment is, and this moment, and this moment, and this moment...

Apparently cool is

by Anonymous on December 20 2011, @11:04 am

Apparently cool is every/anything..., its the neckties wall streeters wear on those blustery mornings before a big merger, cool is the feces found in fastfood "meat", cool is the oceans salty water that sprays up on deck just before they do an illegal sewage dump, who else has the cool, the McCool, if you like?

You confuse cool and a kb

by kip.durocher on December 18 2011, @06:44 pm

You confuse cool and a kb session.

you're not talking cool,

by Anonymous on December 18 2011, @10:13 am

you're not talking cool, you're talking the under 20 yr olds, don't mistake simple with cool, which died years ago. So go buy an organic piece of sh#t and feel cool.

Spoken well. I agree.

by Anonymous on December 16 2011, @10:26 am

Spoken well. I agree.

In fact, to add to that...

by Anonymous on December 16 2011, @10:27 am

In fact, to add to that... thank you for sharing!

Let's describe where

by Neoliberalism and where it takes us on December 16 2011, @09:46 am

Let's describe where Neoliberalism will take us if we let it. We've seen it before with Mercantile England but this will an even more rigorous form made so by hind sight. This will take the 99 to a place that is darker still than Stalinist Russia or the experience of the Jews in Nazi Germany- Mercantile England already was. It will take us to a place of prejudicial cannibalism. Right now the average person has three options. They can treadmill in useless essentially unneeded jobs or be cannon foddered or warehoused in what will be increasingly for-profit prisons. But Neoliberalism has a plan. The plan is for the developed world wage to come down to a global average of about $1. Of course this amounts to mass murder but the enthusiasts are prepared for it. At its end point people will find themselves in a system where inequity, injustice and inhumanity are maximized- where privilege is optimized. People will be born drafted into concentration camps and worked to death starting almost from birth. These will be very much like the concentrated animal feeding operations that livestock are now subjected to. No property, no rights and no possibility of either.

This is where the reversal of taxation naturally leads. It must be clear that taxation is always properly re-distribution to correct for problems in distribution but when it is reversed it is a theft of the highest order that will quickly destroy a society, it's the theft of almost everyone's life. They might as well be stealing people's blood but here the theft begins with theft of time and attention in a total enclosure movement. Printing money with abandon is a better strategy and a safer course. Digressing, a eugenic mythos will of necessity reestablish itself. The usual kinds will emerge. The inbreed blue blooded mafioso royal thug and their merchant partners. Not to mention the sycophant progenitors. Humanity or the 99 will be considered a dark untouchable brood, an experiment to be born in the dark and die in the dark. The usual population excuses will be made, this time it will supposedly have been necessary to save the planet.

Under this system with the efficiency of the data base one can imagine the plight of pregnant women in Mercantile England working deep in the bowels of coal mines half naked with babies strapped to their chest, working while the babies suckled bottles of opium to keep them quiet. That's our fate under neolibralism. It will soon be apparent as it was to some then that some are born hardwired superior by nature of who they are related to and others born hardwired inferior destined by god to serve their superiors and not more than chattel.

This is what modern American came from, with a genocide perpetrated on the indigenous peoples of America along the way and resonant slavery for the blacks. Its business was slavery and its laws were derivative from that slavery, and slavery or cannibalism is its default fall-back position its unconscious assumption. Some of the critics of Marx said that the only place his models would have worked was England. Seems the Marxian prescription would some applicability everywhere with the spread of the English/American taint. Think about what is wrong with England when it won't sign the Universal Codicil on Human Rights. It's trying to preserve the Neoliberal future that it deep down still believes in. Imagine converting your neighbor and their children into to your property, converting their lives and their future into your property for your glorification.

You don't have property until you own other people to rape and terrorize, mutilate and murder at will. This is systematized criminality that convicts humanity itself sliding it into a hole with the lubrication of pain killing inebriation. It's a life not worth living for all of humanity and to think with automation we could be doing better than we did prior to technology where 4 hours of work a day was sufficient. This is humanity losing its humanity and using its technology to destroy itself- not we stopped teaching the humanities and instead teach the bullshit slavery that is business. When the last business school is strung up by its entrails... The last thing we need is more business, nothing could matter less and nothing should have a lower priority- we were better off in the bush. Find within you a response to the truism that "slavery is murder," defend yourselves and your families.

Don't worry Santa still loves

by kip.durocher on December 18 2011, @06:42 pm

Don't worry Santa still loves you.