There is a related term called cognitive capture, which I
recently came across and it describes quite well what I’ve been feeling about
US society on an even large scale, and really global society as well, for some
time but didn’t quite have the vocabulary to say. The term is borrowed from the
psychological condition where the mind cannot perceive even important things in
its field of senses because it is too distracted with other things in that
field. In its borrowed definition is means that nearly everyone who is
connected to society is too mesmerized by the modern capitalist world, and in
some sense bribed by it, that they can’t see the injustice and plutocracy of
it. And even worse, the mind can’t realize the distractions are systematic,
intentional, and yes, even logical.
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Regulatory Capture and Cognitive Capture
I was familiar with the concept of regulatory capture, the
idea that an industry can persuade the government, or another entrusted regulator,
to not do their job of regulating. This is usually done through the vast
amounts of influence the business carries in the money it generates and it can
be practically done through several means including lobbying, financial contributions
(legal bribery), bribery (the illegal kind), insider appointment, blackmail, and
situational/political leverage. This leads to a very favorable climate for the
industry, allowing it to go on doing whatever it was planning on doing without
interruption, and over time can even lead to opportunities to push the
boundaries of its operations further since it can go on without any real
consequences. This creates situations where lobbyists paid by the industry actually
write legislation with built in loop holes so both the industry and the
politician can come out winners. The industry gets the rules in place, or lack
thereof, that it wants while the politician will boost their reputation claiming
they are regulating or fixing something with their Swiss cheese legislation. This
is the relationship we have in the United States between our corporate world
and our politicians. It’s essentially the same relationship as bribery and
corruption and it has existed for just about as long as both industry and
regulation have. However, I was never acutely aware of the specific term regulatory
capture, and I feel better now that I know it and can quickly refer to the
concept by recalling this term.
Friday, June 21, 2013
Vipassana Meditation: Part III
Part I and Part II of this epic tale
Day 7 –So I woke up with a realization that after that literally insane experience when falling asleep that I definitely needed to see this process through. I had obviously touched on something and found some real scary things inside of me.
Day 7 –So I woke up with a realization that after that literally insane experience when falling asleep that I definitely needed to see this process through. I had obviously touched on something and found some real scary things inside of me.
Even if it was making strange things
happen, I was learning a whole bunch and that these new experiences and
challenges were just the sort of things I wanted, and ultimately the type of
thing that is on a road to a rare destination. I went to morning meditation
with renewed energy and determination to get better at the technique and see
what else there was I could learn. Even if I thought I was destroying some of
the sankharas that I liked, I determined that I probably couldn’t do any long-term
damage to my ambition, my sex-drive, or anything else worth caring about in
just 10 days so I was probably going to be fine. Besides, I had committed to do
this for 10 days, so I was going to give it a full 10 days.
But in another immediate twist of attitudes,
and despite waking up so resolved that I was definitely seeing the process
through, by the afternoon I had once again decided that I was going to leave. I
thought I had reached the limit of how far I wanted to go…
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Vipassana Meditation: Part II
Part I in case you missed it and want to start from the beginning...
Day
3 – I began to make up personalities about the
other people who were taking the course with me. Without the ability to talk or
gesture or make eye contact, you just had to assume a lot about people if you
wanted to give them any sort of identity. I determined that I thought roommate
#2 was really pretentious and didn’t like me. I was dead wrong about this. He
turned out to be a very nice humble guy. I was kind of annoyed by anyone else
in the class who would breathe loudly or make lots of noise in the meditation
hall. I felt like they had no social awareness and I wished that they would
learn how to be still and silent so that everyone else could focus on their meditation.
It turned out that by Day 5 everyone had gotten pretty good at doing this and
found a way for themselves to be comfortable (and silent!) during the class.
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Vipassana Meditation: Part I
Last August after quitting my job and
ridding myself of all other obligations in the world, I was able to take some
time from what used to be my very busy and hectic life to go on 10-day Vipassana
meditation retreat. Most times I would try to explain this concept to someone
they would respond with some variation “Oh, sounds like Eat, Pray, Love.” While I feel it makes my experience seem generic,
and perhaps even a bit girly since I don’t usually personally relate to
storylines told from a female perspective, it undermined my true motives for trying it as
many assumed I was inspired by images of Julia Roberts, the lead actress in the film version of Eat, Pray, Love; Pretty
Woman; and some Hugh Grant and Richard Gere movies. While I currently feel being
compared to Julia Roberts is more of an insult than a compliment, and having never read the book or seen film, I was insulted by the notion. Perhaps someday I
will get around to watching the movie or reading the book for an
actual comparison and when I will do I might admit that it isn't such an insult. But currently that's not the case.
I think that an experience this
interesting and personal should travel by word of mouth and not be mass
marketed. But if it inspires people to take action in their life, I guess it really isn't a problem. For better or for worse that’s how good stories have been spread
since the days of the Bible. So I should probably just get used to it.
Since this whole idea is really based on my
own perceptions and experiences I really want to explain the concepts as best
as I can in my interpretation. There are web pages you can find that will
explain more about Vipassana meditation and explains it in a way perhaps more
suitable to those who teach it, particularly S.N. Goenka, the primary person responsible for establishing many of these meditation centers around the globe, but since my purpose is to retell
the story as I perceived and experienced it, I feel for this case I should
explain this in my own words. Also, just as a warning, reading this may lead you to the conclusion that I'm a crazy person, and I'm OK with that.
Sunday, April 7, 2013
The Fallacy of the Free Market
The free market is a brilliant idea.
It, and many ideas stemming from it, have garnered countless Nobel Prizes and
helped earn fortunes a million times over. Basic supply and demand curves which
you read about in your Intro to Economics class in high school paint a simple,
pretty picture which shows how a free market through many individuals acting in
their own interests can find a price and quantity output efficiency point for
any good or service. Based on cost to supply and the demand to purchase prices
and quantities will naturally negotiate through the actions of the buyers and
sellers and arrive at the efficiency point. The free market has been essential
in my understanding of the world as I use it, often daily, in decisions and
conversations about business, politics, international relations, poverty, you
name it.
The issue is that today the free
market frequently becomes something associated with political parties, with one
claiming to believe in the virtues of the free market and therefore against any
sort of government regulation, while an opposing party will propose some sort
of regulation and in turn be labelled a non-believer in free markets that hates
capitalism.
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