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Jason Humboldt's avatar

Holy smokes, you must have been chewing on these ideas for a while.. this was fantastic!

Not sure if intentional (I suspect so) but you really trojan horse some of the strongest ideas into this piece the way it's structured.

I think even some of my Biff-like acquaintances may nod most of the way through it before their brows subtly furrow and confusing feelings bubble within 🥲

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Stephanie Dunn's avatar

Good essay. Thanks. I love James Schneider's concept of the two personalities of capitalism and their relative dominance being reflective of the security of capitalism's status quo. I hadn’t heard that before. The release of cognitive dissonance in the rejection of ESG also rings true.

I'm hoping for an additional exploration of the flipside.

By the flipside I mean the release of cognitive dissonance the ESG crowd feels when it finally stops trying to reform capitalism and ditches it completely. How do we ditch capitalism? How do you proceed when you've already ditched your belief in capitalism but most activism truly does look like virtue signaling? How do you proceed when you understand the appeal of patriotism, nationalism, family, and church – after all, the only clear means of security is a paying job in the national economy, and family and church offer much needed belonging – but you're surrounded by Lady Sybil types who think those wrong-headed 1950s people are the problem? How do you ditch capitalism when the entire international structure encloses people into nation-states that define citizens as producers in a global capitalist economy? How do you ditch capitalism when culture itself is enclosed by a global system of compulsory schooling that replicates competitive capitalist culture, yet everyone around you who complains about capitalism reveres universal schooling?

Too big an ask, I know. You’re doing a lot by offering tools of explanation. I guess that’s one answer to “How do you proceed?”

On second thought, I just realized that the question I’m trying to ask is this: How do we create an alternate source of security? I’m unconvinced that activism and union support can resolve the underlying insecurity that capitalism thrives on. I know unions can be helpful, but I’m not all in. I think I’m struggling with the false dichotomy between the individual and the collective. Capitalism doesn’t care about Individual freedom. Capitalism steals freedom. Capitalism crushes individuals. Autonomous individuals are naturally motivated to find community. I’m tired of leftists targeting individual liberty as the enemy. It’s both false and counterproductive. It’s like we keep insisting that “9 out of 10 workers agree, autonomous individuals prefer capitalism!” It’s a pretty shitty sales pitch. I want individual liberty back. We don’t have to sacrifice the rights of individuals for the sake of collectives. We need freedom from capitalist constraints to regain our autonomy so we can fulfil our inherent desire for collective belonging.

That’s what most of us are looking for: security in belonging. I’m also convinced that our fucked-up concept of education pulls that out from under us before we have any chance of becoming something other than capitalist cogs.

I hope this doesn’t come across as criticism. I love your essays and videos. I’m just searching for something I haven’t found.

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