MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Yesterday a female CEO/glorified saleswoman "broke LinkedIn"** with a potty-mouth post to blatantly flog her not-so-in-demand and rather niche/regional product. Predictably it got a lot of reads, attention, comments, and a predictable followup post - basically, "so I said fuck, get over it".
LinkedIn will undoubtedly not "get over it", but *will* absorb the change and suffer another hit to its already waning fortunes as professional-network-turned-Facebook, anticipating the day where it becomes MySpace (read: past tense).
But the noise is instructive. She did what many insurrectionists will do - drive the bus straight into the wall and laugh about it. The famed article "The Tragedy of the Commons" was based more on shared markets being damaged by neglect, less cared for than private spaces - Adam Smith's non-benign one-handed twin.
Here the noise is not just the uproar - it's also the cognitive dissonance - the "you can't do that" feeling that destroys our confidence and basic precepts, violates our now (epi-?)genetically encoded values system - taking the last cookie without asking, crossing the street on red, etc., etc.
Our systems are based on trust and accepted behavior to a large extent, a type of Deity we worship, to which we must make obeisance and token gestures, even if we (as in the conservative movement) are raping and plundering it with glee and abandon. Democracy, freedom, whatever - all the tropes we can summon.
Today I woke with the funny feeling of a World Gone Quiet - all waiting for us, the elephant in the room, the 800 pound gorilla, to do something, anything, whatever we're expecting or not.
The Noise had disappeared for a moment - which is timely, as I've been fighting off the noise the last few days - trying to pick up the signal, trying to figure out what the lesson is for the current times, what kind of fighting or acceptance, new strategy or way of perceiving...
I've picked up Sudoku a bit over the past month, and I noticed the more I fill in every combination, the less I see the breaks, the opportunity in the puzzle - the game becomes way too messy and chaotic. It's a compromise, however - play too passive and no combinations appear (or you run out of time and have to get to work). Quasi-ironically I play *faster* when I play less retentive.
On a larger scale, our political and business and economic systems are cranking up the noise level and taking control as needed. What's unusual is the level of ambient noise about, related to the Overton Window - we've got conditioned to pink noise, to a huge amount of distraction, and we don't much notice all the deflection that's going on - how much deception takes place underneath the surface.
Though we noticed this past year, as it broke all the norms, and got settled into our new normal - somehow the behavior that in 100 ways was iconoclastically set in direct opposition to much of what we regard as healthy, sane, civilized behavior was roundly panned - and then accepted as okay. (I believe the Ten Commandments lost 3 or 40.
And that's largely because of quiescence - our adaption to conditions, the level of stability we've already achieved means we're prone to accept even *more* shock into the system - while we've heard of chaos theory, we don't *expect* it applies to us, only butterflies and some weather somewhere. *Our* institutions are stable, it's only that moustached guy's somewhere else or back in time - the Great Depression's karma was handled by WWII, never more it shall be...
There's a full court press on now to control the message, as the Internet allows in even more bizarre ways. Our attention is beaten mercilessly with the irrelevant and highly contrived, and it's much easier to steal our car while we're distracted.
But somewhere in there is signal, useful patterns, a real gist of what's going on. Less and less do we know what the "right" thing to do is, but more and more we have to choose even our activities to fit our desired outcomes, to measure which ones might have some chance of personal or social change.
Raise Against the Machine - it's just bluffing, trying to get us to fold, to exhaust us, give up. But like the Commons or the Stock Market or any other shared resource, it's not nearly as hard to clean up and maintain as its partisan naysayers insist. But we do have to counter unscrupulous behavior with hard work, coherent vision, and that long parodied tag, "vigilance".
Well, scratch that - the cow's left the barn, so instead of "vigilance" plug in "much more comprehensive diligence". Less hope, more smart tools and persistence. And a bit of quiet and reflection. The noise is not the signal. The disruption is not where the real action is. We're in a magic show continuously distracted by the shiny object in the magician's distracting hand. The solution is not to become more distracted, to join in the noise.
Kesey used to say "step back, walk away". Lakoff notes our active participation just supports the framing we struggle against. Break the mold, do something different. Be unique, unpredictable, off the radar, yourself. The best way to fuck the noise is to tune into your own signal. What's going on?
**In the tradition of some cleavage pic or other celebrity nonsense "breaking Twitter". There's some interesting side discussion to be had of whether a man could have gotten away with this type of a post without hugely damaging his brand and business. In fact, there's some interesting discussion to be had about *what* is acceptable, and for what reasons, context, expectations, etc. We have a bifurcated and trifurcated society, and the rules are greatly changing, even if the methods of disruption haven't really changed that much since Genghis Khan and Martin Luther.and knocking down the vendor tables in the temple or landing a small boat in stealth on Playa de los Colorados. Expectation vs. outcome tied to a priori probability of success, perfected with lessons learned. William Burroughs used to practice being El Hombre Invisible, the art of walking brazenly through the center of town without actually being seen - noticed. These arts can't just be the domain of the bad-intentioned.
Comments
I have a strictly no politics profile on LInkedIn and have never linked it to Facebook or twitter. I look at LinkedIn and keep my resume there, but otherwise I'm still not sure what it is good for! :) I've never become employed through any LinkedIn anything, so after all these years of having an account I am not exactly sure why I do.
by tmccarthy0 on Mon, 01/16/2017 - 1:08pm
Same here. I get messages from time to time from people that I know, but usually by the time I read them the messages are about 6 months old. I've been asked to comment on others' abilities, etc; but I've never had a firm job offer. I don't want one; I like being retired. It may work for some people but I've never heard of any success from anyone I know.
by CVille Dem on Mon, 01/16/2017 - 1:41pm
Hahaha me either Jan!
by tmccarthy0 on Mon, 01/16/2017 - 3:47pm
It's a great leveller - you can reach rather influential people for that elevator pitch or organizing with few hurdles, though I always tried to use that ease of access with respect and professionalism.
It's lost quite a bit of trust the last year or 2, but for political organizing, possibly fundraising, I'd guess it's still quite useful.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 01/16/2017 - 5:36pm
True, but does that mean my work profile should be separate from any political profile?
by tmccarthy0 on Tue, 01/17/2017 - 3:40pm
Depends on who you work for, possible repercussions or simply muddying the waters.
If you don't really use the business portion, maybe put a close date on it and act as if the politics side is all you're doing. (yeah, you won't get headhunters banging on your door, but since you're over 35, that's probably not happening anyway)
by PeraclesPlease on Tue, 01/17/2017 - 5:22pm
This is very eloquent, PP, and your thesis resonates with me, but I wonder...what about Lenny Bruce, Gloria Steinem, MLK, and the Stonewall riots? What's the difference between confronting priggish or unjust norms and undermining cultural standards of decency?
by Michael Wolraich on Tue, 01/17/2017 - 11:33am
What's obscene? Do we "know it when we see it" or is the very definition up for debate? Without trying to speak for Peracles (as if that's even slightly possible), cultural and societal standards change when society changes the culture. It's the people and confrontations, like those you mention, that create the questions - how they are ultimately answered is never really predetermined.
by barefooted on Tue, 01/17/2017 - 1:16pm
I think I was focused less on people trying to take care of needs, and more on those just out for a lark, indulging themselves, or acting out privilege. Rather than your list, I might offer the Sex Pistols as a further out Lenny Bruce, but here still I see more coddled Veruca Salt types instead of those trying to push a different kind of envelope.
I likely curse as much or more than this woman, her article was at least well written, but still, there was a cheapness to the act, echoed in the "don't be such a stick in the mud", "business can be fun too..." comments. I mean I've had my moments that looked a bit like Wolf of Wall Street that could have gotten me killed, badly beaten and/or fired - this is more like pushing the edge in front of a Rolodex - I.e. it isn't, however moderately it resembles it.
Perhaps the cheapness made the point, that we're surrounded by these little acted out charades, bits of theater, that really don't mean much of anything, but do seize an opening, a weakness of the system.
We see it all the time in politics, but it doesn't always appear to be such a game, but it is. The well-practiced outrage and sincerity bit, the self-srving bullshit when half the time it's just resume fluffing and padding a consultant's job, if lucky a contract extension, or the rote required for reelection.
Imagin some of these folk reflecting on what they do all day, but they'rw probably able to explain it all away - just trying to make a living, y'know.
by PeraclesPlease on Tue, 01/17/2017 - 2:21pm