sábado, 30 de dezembro de 2023

There is no reason to hope, period. We have known the best version of capitalism (social democracy) for five decades due to the existence of the USSR.

Capitalism is irreformable. A system based on the pursuit of profit and capital accumulation cannot stop growing; it must commodify and securitize everything. Financial capitalism is an example of how nature, ecosystem services, the genetic code, or parts thereof can become private assets codified in law. Additionally, we have the rise of synthetic biology, AI, transhumanism, etc.

The problem of ecological overshoot will eventually be solved by eugenic means; the useless class that Yuval Harari talks about may well be a group to start with. The capitalist class tolerated social democracy until neoliberal theology took control. The Chicago Boys' first economic intervention occurred in Chile under the Pinochet dictatorship. At the same time, the majority of Western citizens lived in a kind of political hibernation while TINA was imposed on us and will lead us to Technofascism.

domingo, 24 de dezembro de 2023

Competition is a sin, John D. Rockefeller was right

Intergenerational cooperation and solidarity were and continue to be crucial for the survival of social animals, such as the human species.

The innate motivation for cooperative interdependence and solidarity has been replaced by submission to organized political, socioeconomic, and ideological-cultural systems with the power to punish, coerce, stigmatize, ostracize, exploit, and enslave to enforce "respect" for property rights, private ownership, privileges, and rentier parasitism.

These systems are based on the asymmetry of the exercise of power, which Frédéric Bastiat accurately defines in the quote, "When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men in a society, over time they create for themselves a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it."

Participatory democracy instead of systems of power based on wealth accumulation and social control.

Productivist growthism, technofixism, and technoscientism form a structural ideological trinity of the capitalist political economy that justifies the privatization and commodification of literally everything.

Ecosocialism, as I imagine it, is the return to forms of political economy based on democratic cooperation that does not have to be collectivist but focused on the decommodification and definancialization of the economy, society, and nature.

quarta-feira, 13 de dezembro de 2023

Lies to elect the best rent-seeking democracy money can buy and other stuff

 “The Best Democracy Money Can Buy,” a 2002 book by Greg Palast, sums up the essence of Western-style democracies: money dictates the rules of the political game.

The only reference regarding funding in the Declaration on Criteria for Free and Fair Elections https://www.ipu.org/impact/democracy-and-strong-parliaments/ipu-standards/declaration-criteria-free-and-fair-elections

4. The Rights and Responsibilities of States

"Provide for the formation and free functioning of political parties, possibly regulate the funding of political parties and electoral campaigns, ensure the separation of party and State, and establish the conditions for competition in legislative elections on an equitable basis;"

Money buys influence. This means that an enormous amount and diversity of resources are allocated to projects that, apparently having nothing to do with elections, use ideological-cultural narratives to format the collective imagination by managing public perception.

The socio-cultural environment is the natural environment for human beings through which ideological-cultural narratives are disseminated, assimilated and reproduced in the form of attitudes, behaviors and world views.

The PR industrial complex uses the most recent knowledge produced by neuroscience and psychology added to information technologies and language framing to plant simplified ideas in the subconscious mind that bypass conscious scrutiny. It is not only about brainwashing; it is mainly about the ability to tell us what to think, resorting to repetition and emotional manipulation.

Agents accredited in political correctness function as the leading diffusers of paradigmatic versions of a linear reality in which everything that happens is a one-dimensional open book.

In this context, free elections function as if they were an athletics competition, in which we are supposed to believe that all participants leave the starting line on equal terms.

We should have already realized that political parties with access to power alternate, but dominant policies only undergo cosmetic changes.

A lot of historical fiction mixed with some facts is used as tools for ideological radicalization, political polarization, and psycho-emotional manipulation. This strategy does not aim to produce political truth, much less lucid judgment about the root causes of most structural problems that afflict society; it aims to use people as cannon fodder for staged political wars.

Political priorities that could contribute to solving systemic problems are excluded by the political parties in power because the success of careerist politicians depends on their willingness to manage public affairs in terms that serve private interests, in the short, medium and long term.

Money and power go hand in hand, which means that societal problems are relegated to the bottom of the list whenever they negatively affect the interests of the ruling elites.

Money's influence in politics goes far beyond the direct or indirect financing of political candidates and their respective electoral campaigns. The influence of money on politics involves financing projects in all areas of knowledge production and high-tech research to groom the next professional managerial and academic class.

The PR industry uses this knowledge to develop innovative and more sophisticated propaganda techniques to create cultural-ideological narratives to shape public perception. Most people realize that this influence exists, but only a minority recognize its true power because the myth of rational decision and conscious choice is accepted by default. The belief that individual bio-cultural-ideological identity is the exclusive responsibility of conscious individual choices is still the dominant dogma.

Intuitively, we know that this is not true, but we perceive reality and behave as if it were, and this is what matters in the process of affirming the dominant implicit narratives in how we interpret, evaluate, and respond to sociocultural stimuli.

Conscious responses emerge from a subconscious neurocognitive process based on dominant ideological-cultural narratives stored in the form of long-term memories.

A mixture of ideas, facts, fiction, prejudices, dogmas, and myths are present in the elaboration of the ideological-cultural narratives conveyed by the mainstream media as agents of sociocultural validation of what is true, false, right, and wrong.

Individual idiosyncrasies are defined by the symbiotic process between character, personality, temperament and personal experience, playing a determining role in the way different people have different opinions and attitudes when faced with identical problems and events.

However, this does not mean that propaganda, in essence, does not exert the influence it should have because the aim of propaganda is not exclusively to encourage a uniform response but to divert people from the truth by whatever means.

The extended indoctrination process known as education is responsible for the incorporation of cultural, ideological, conceptual and symbolic baggage that shapes us in the present and will largely influence who we will become later in life.

Sensory perception is the gateway for external, material, conceptual, and symbolic reality to reach the neurocognitive systems and be transmuted into experience incorporated into living circuits. The brain is not a computer; it is a living organ with the “responsibility” of regulating the homeostatic process within limits compatible with life.

The fundamental purpose of the development of neural networks and cognitive-affective skills is to make the organism capable of surviving autonomously.

The socio-cultural ecosystem is an artificial conceptual and symbolic reality from which each human being incorporates a set of structural rules for the formation of biosociocultural identity, and there is no congenital cognitive filter to protect us from the early indoctrination to which we are all subject.

The structuring of ideological-cultural narratives instilled during the personality development phase will remain with us for the rest of our lives. The experiences to which we are involuntarily exposed, or to which we voluntarily expose ourselves, influence who we will become.

It is essential to cultivate strategies to have an analyzed life and be aware of the omnipresence of narratives with the power to manipulate perception and condition behavior, keeping us unaware of what is happening in the depths of our intimacy.

The daily revalidation of the foundational narratives of the dominant cultural-ideological identity aims to reinforce how we perceive and describe ourselves.

The supply of narratives available in modern societies may satisfy the political, cultural, aesthetic and ethical expectations and sensibilities across the ideological spectrum. It turns out that most of those narratives spring from the underlying acceptance of a dysfunctional societal model that requires the use of systemic violence to survive.

The truth is not anyone's monopoly, nor can it be found in a single narrative.

A culture of dialogue instead of a culture of supremacy and domination is essential to build solutions based on complementarity.

The core of democracy must be based on governance for the common good, providing basic needs such as food, shelter, health, education and fundamental freedoms.

Facade democracy is based on regular electoral cycles legitimizing policies that facilitate the accumulation of wealth and the concentration of power in the hands of a handful of individuals, institutions, and organizations out of the merits of free markets.

The privatization of state assets and functions (commodification of universal public services, spaces and industries) does not produce more freedom of choice for the common citizen; it manufactures artificial scarcity and poverty.

The State controlled by the plutoligarchy does not need to eliminate democratic institutions as long as the power structure feels secure. If any form of threat looms on the horizon, the corporate State will have no problem resorting to violence to restore corporate normalcy.

The public interest and social justice are no longer normal functions of the State; what remains is the police State. The State controlled by corporate power is the essence of the fascist State. Freedom of expression and movement is increasingly restricted and austerity is the political tool to weaken the base of the social pyramid. Societies organized in vertical hierarchies distribute privileges, rights, and freedoms in such a way that each class identifies easily with the class above and despises the class below. The meritocratic myth that justifies growing social inequality in hyper-financialized economies is clear proof of the total disrespect that current regimes show towards the majority of citizens.

The constant barrage of propaganda to which the public is exposed, combined with the precariousness of living conditions, force most of us to comply with the system, even when we are aware of the fence of lies and half-truths in which we are held captive.

Being aware of this harsh reality is not enough to mobilize us because the need to survive and support our families makes us think twice before acting against the powers that be. Decades of individualism and social isolation by design are responsible for the structural lack of unity and trust among the working class.

In an atomized society, the sense of self-preservation makes us put values and ideals in the background to prioritize activities and interests that provide economic security.

Most PR narratives aim to divide, tribalize, distract, and isolate, the policy of "divide and rule".

The more firmly we believe that we perceive, choose and decide based on the capacity for independent rational judgment, the more we run the risk of being influenced and deceived by the cultural-ideological narratives to which we are repeatedly exposed.

Being aware of the power of repeated ad nauseam narratives does not make us immune to their influence on our subconscious. The only way to cultivate resilience is to take time to reflect on the reasons that lead us to believe what we believe and learn to put everything into perspective.

We should feel the need to develop a system of ideas and values ​​that explores beyond conventional boundaries motivated by the need to understand the multilayers and dimensions of reality, considering that what happens behind the scenes is more relevant than what is shown.

In the society of the spectacle, fiction is transmuted into credible reality as part of the essence of the art of manipulating perception to manufacture consent.

A fundamental tool to deconstruct the barrage of propaganda and disinformation in which we live submerged is to learn how human neurocognitive (including cognitive linguistics and language framing) and psycho-affective systems work.

Other areas in which it is essential to acquire comprehensive knowledge are banking, financial, and monetary systems.

Economics is not an exact science. It is part of the social sciences. Orthodox (neoclassical) economists use mathematical models designed to show the expected results. Reality becomes a mathematical simulation and money is assumed as if it were nothing more than a mere externality. In fact, money is a taboo topic among neoclassic economists. How is money created, who has the power to create it, what is the role of central banks, what is sovereign money, who benefits from the financialization of the economy, etc? The true answers to these and many other questions should be known by all those who want to understand the real impact that monetary and fiscal policies have on our lives. We need to understand how these public enemies enrich themselves while impoverishing us.

Cultural-ideological narratives are the natural way of answering doubts, concerns, and fears humans face to integrate the surrounding ecosystem while creating the ethnocultural identity that regulates the community's social relations.

Public order is fundamental to keeping society functional. Therefore, complex societies need to have ways of intervening to restore public order in the event of disruption. Police forces have the function of combating crime and restoring public order. But propaganda is not always enough to manufacture consent; that is when the argument of defending public order justifies trampling on the demos(cracy).

Propaganda is a constant in society; it is present in all media, especially in those consumed by the masses. Television and cinema have been privileged means of planting ideas and legitimizing, ridiculing, or demonizing behaviors, resorting to the use of subliminal messages.

Most realize that advertising influences consumer choices, yet somehow we believe we are immune to it. This characteristic is even more pronounced in ideological “choices”; we assume that we choose to believe what we believe as part of a conscious and autonomous decision. In fact, most choices and decisions we make are influenced by a subconscious ballast that implicitly regulates the cognitive-affective process; that is, the decision or the choice is made to a large extent, or in its entirety, as a subconscious process.

The jungle has real dangers like snakes, crocodiles, tigers, lions, etc., even if they are out of sight, we have to stay alert to avoid deadly surprises. The type of society we live in is a much more dangerous jungle, a range of opportunistic predators spread ideological baits everywhere. Once incorporated into our cognitive-affective system, they will parasitize it without compassion. Believing that it was a rational and conscious choice does not help to expel the parasitic agent that colonizes, exploits and can even destroy us.

The innate ability to learn conceptual languages ​​and use creative imagination allows humans to create ideological-cultural narratives, the foundations of collective identity and cohesion. This reality is not shielded against usurpation and opportunistic exploitation. The collective good is never guaranteed; it has to be defended with rules, principles, and laws in which the citizens, through participatory democracy, can avoid the enclosure of the commons by opportunists (individuals, groups, families, etc.) who, over time, will end up remaking society in the image of their interests, which is why we have a society divided into classes and castes, property rights codified in law and glorified through moral narratives. Participatory democracy must apply the precautionary principle to avoid usurpation of the collective good.

Society must have mechanisms to protect the common good, and the main mechanism is a living culture of democratic responsibility. Handing over the management of democracy to political professionals means losing control of the democratic process and transforming democracy into an empty shell.

Society will always have opportunists willing to exploit the vulnerabilities inherent to the human condition, take advantage of social and economic crises, or even create them to come up with solutions that serve their disguised agendas.

We live in a society where we are led to believe that we need others to tell us what is best for us. There is nothing wrong with seeking professional advice and sharing knowledge and experiences, but as we are indoctrinated to follow, obey, and depend on the dictates of authorities to govern our lives, achieving intellectual autonomy is a herculean effort and part of a process that will never be complete.

One of the goals of the dominant culture is to make us believe that we depend on saviors, liberators, influencers, gurus, etc., to discover who we are, to rescue us from evil, to save us from chaos, etc...

Life itself is meaningless, which does not mean that we, individually and collectively, cannot have a purposeful and meaningful existence. Guilt, shame and the need to be accepted, recognized and loved are widely exploited to implement norms and models that make people feel uncomfortable taking certain stands publicly, while at the same time, style becomes the way to show an identity that probably in most cases is inconsistent with who people really are. 

The society of spectacle and make-believe generates alienation, denialism and cognitive dissonance. Be aware of a culture where people value freedom of opinion more than freedom of being. Don't get me wrong, I am all for freedom of opinion, but my opinion counts for nothing if I have no political agency. Unless fundamental rights are respected and cultivated, such as access to universal basic services from the cradle to the grave, opinion only matters when your wallet can back it. 

Freedom is a lifelong comprehensive project, freedom to be, to evolve, and to change without being penalized or destroyed. The freedom to discover and explore new interests in the process of giving meaning to life without the need for a defined purpose. 

Be unpretentiously compassionate, empathic and honest. It might not make you rich, but it will heal a lot of wounds.

We live in a supposedly democratic system, which guarantees the freedom to explore ignorance, naivety, the need to belong, insecurity, uncertainty, helplessness, material scarcity, natural disasters, etc., to prioritize profitable entrepreneurship. A system that exploits human vulnerabilities to serve private interests and make people even more alienated and powerless is considered morally acceptable because it falls within the scope of market-driven free enterprise. This is the type of “democracy” that requires from us a single form of participation, participatory annihilation.

The success of indoctrination campaigns is based on narratives that exalt belonging to something greater than ourselves.

We must realize that there are opportunists behind everything that happens in society. At the top of this parasitic class are the opportunists who pull the strings of financial capitalism.

Below this plutocratic elite that controls the strings of the financialized economy, citizens from all walks of life try their luck to see if they are also blessed with the blessing of accumulating wealth without producing anything. Many middle-class people earn money in the financial markets, this does not make them better or worse than the rest of the population, but the truth is that the greater the percentage of the population that benefits financially from the financial economy, the easier it is to justify the perpetuation of this form of fictitious gangster economy that only benefits the rentier class. It is mainly a form of rentier capitalism at home and abroad.

Among the cream of this world of megalomaniacal psychopaths are the institutions widely known; they dominate international investment and finance. Its modus operandi is to sabotage any and every alternative that may serve the people, including the citizens of so-called allied countries.

Since the beginnings of the so-called civilization, emperors, kings, tyrants, in short, megalomaniacal psychopaths have dedicated an enormous amount of material and human resources to the construction of monuments, palaces, and temples as resistant as possible to the erosion of time as a way of eternalizing their immeasurable egos. In the present, we continue to admire the grandeur of these monuments and venerate the celebrities, conquerors and heroes of the past as if they were the best example of collective heritage that could have been passed on to us.

Many of these places have been transformed into mass tourist attractions as part of the economic development to which all countries are entitled. Then, as today, what is needed is to keep people distracted, circus and beer.

In the past, access to information was conditioned by relative inaccessibility. Currently, information is available on the internet, and paradoxically, ignorance and the mythification of reality are still the common denominator. Information is not transmuted into factual knowledge due to the constant stimulation of our sensory organs; the opposite is true; by being overwhelmed with constant sensory stimulation, our cognitive abilities become blurred.

To understand the reality in which we live, we must be careful in choosing the contexts and information to which we expose ourselves because the function of the human brain is to manage and maintain the organism within parameters compatible with life, which equates to saying that at the subconscious level, information is "processed" and incorporated into the long-term memory system to help us respond appropriately to present and future external environment challenges. The brain is not concerned with factual truth but with working with logical hypotheses to respond appropriately to external challenges. This is why people comply primarily with strategies that guarantee survival and socio-professional success even at the expense of resorting to cognitive dissonance and denialism in the presence of blatant injustices and systemic dysfunctions.

Complex societies are full of deceptive and labyrinthine cultural-ideological narratives that often lead us down to dead ends. In addition to complexity, society is compartmentalized into asymmetrical socio-professional strata. Although information in the Internet Age is omnipresent, infotainment and propaganda are easier to digest than information that requires attention and in-depth study. Wealthier classes and families with higher academic levels tend to be more careful when choosing content and contexts for themselves and their children. Social class and professional status continue to be a negative discrimination factor.

The working class does not live beyond its means; it is deprived of the means to live. The working class and all people who find themselves in a situation of deprivation must first of all overcome any feelings of guilt and shame they feel about their situation and condition. Class consciousness and solidarity are fundamental to getting people out of social isolation and the feeling of helplessness.

It is essential to understand that individual and collective interests were interdependent in indigenous societies. This form of collectivism was based on awareness of individual limitations. Even the most talented among their peers knew that collective survival depended on everyone's commitment to common survival and well-being. If those who were at their peak physically and intellectually were able to convince others that they had the right to keep all the captured pray while the rest were left without food, they would end up expelled or killed for representing a danger to the survival of the community, instead of being venerated and obeyed. When the collective allows the creation of a system of vertical hierarchy, violent repression will become inevitable to guarantee the continuation of the unjust order.

In complex societies, there are parameters that define collective identity, but when it comes to the distribution of power and wealth, a set of values, rules and legal codes are applied to implement and protect privileges and property rights based on the myth of meritocracy.

The web of lies disseminated in the socio-cultural environment has the power to justify the unjustifiable and normalize the abhorrent. The human ability to rationalize and assume accurate and factual narratives that, despite making sense, are nothing more than fiction, a creation of the imagination that can be used to manipulate public perception and condition behavior to manufacture consent.

Cultural-ideological narratives have the power to convert fiction into reality. The narratives to which we are exposed, within the family, social environment, school, or any other, end up being ritualized, mimicked and assimilated into everyday habits until they literally become part of who we are subconsciously. The choices we make and the behaviors we exhibit express this internal bio-sociocultural reality.

The socio-cultural environment created by human beings is constituted by the material reality where we build human societies and from where we extract the resources necessary for survival. We share this physical environment with a vast and diverse number of species that depend on the same environment to survive. For hundreds of thousands of years, humans lived in relative harmony with the natural environment, even though some try to "demonstrate" that there is evidence that indigenous peoples have had as destructive an impact as today's complex technological societies. 

All species have an impact on the environment, partly constructive and partly destructive, human activity also impacts the ecology of spaces occupied permanently or nomadically, but to equate this impact with the so-called civilized activity in which human beings are driven by profit and live in a commodified reality, where anything and everything that can generate profit runs the risk of being exploited to the point of extinction or exhaustion, it's a huge leap of faith.

Moving forward, the fictional part of internalized reality plays as important a role as the factual part in how we perceive reality. The accumulated information is transformed into a cognitive-affective bio-sociocultural experience that allows human beings to attribute meaning, communicate, and organize individual and collective existence through a common language (symbolic and conceptual).

Virtual reality is a dimension of reality created by artists but also by other creative industries using a multiplicity of techniques. Art, literature, and, more recently, the entertainment industry, the public relations industry, the mass media industry and other socio-professional activities are responsible for producing fictional content, contributing to new layers of complexity of virtual reality.

Virtual reality does not exist separate from the material reality in which we live; It is part of it, and it is not easy to distinguish which is which. This phenomenon is as old as humanity, but with the evolution of information technologies and AI, virtual reality is increasingly present in our daily lives, and we begin to feel it as more real than material reality.

The central issue is not in deceiving the senses through virtual effects but in planting worldviews in the human subconscious using virtual "objects" (ideals, concepts, abstractions) with the potential to assume unwanted influence in human communities.

Money is the paradigmatic example of how a virtual “object” manages to “condemn” most human beings to voluntary submission. When a virtual “object” begins to be used as an intermediary to access basic goods and services, as well as to justify the enclosure of the commons, the choice is between submission, violent repression, or hunger. 

Virtual reality is created by telling stories, painting images, drawing symbols and erecting statues and has the power to colonize the human subconscious with all kinds of ideas, including the duty to blindly obey.

It doesn't matter that money is a virtual "good"; for as long as it functions as the lubricant of our socioeconomic life, it becomes more material than the physical environment on which we depend to survive. This ability to attribute importance to objects, ideas, and concepts that belong to the domain of virtual conventions should be a ubiquitous intellectual concern, transversal to all areas of academic and scientific research, and should be included in all pedagogical programs.

We are submerged in an ocean of knowledge, but we lack a comprehensive understanding of the underlying currents. In reality, many academic luminaries are more interested in inflating their egos and exploiting existing divisions (many of which are manufactured) by writing articles and books with the potential to divide further and increase the levels of collective delusion.

Anything can be used as money as long as it is legally recognized and accepted as payment for goods and services.

Gold, silver, and other metallic coins have been used as religious offerings and to pay taxes and fees. The ancient priests realized that gold and silver could be monetized and used as a means of paying for goods and services.

The true value of gold, or any other form of money, including digital money, is in being protected by law. It might seem a heresy but gold is not more valuable than digital money; in fact, digital money illustrates more accurately the true nature of money, virtuality. Money is a concept, a useful social convention, and as such, the use of money as a means of storing value should be restricted in order to avoid the concentration of material power based on the accumulation of virtual wealth. Money should essentially be a unit of account to facilitate commercial exchanges and pay debts and taxes.

Money acquires value by decree, whether by priests in ancient temples or by parliaments in modern times. Money, in the form of precious metals, has value as a form of payment (fiat currency) and as a commodity, however commodity gold belongs to the realm of commodities while gold as currency is a conceptual “object” created and protected by law and confined to the territory where that law applies.

This costs us dearly because our strength is logic, not reason. If we start from a false premise, we will reach a wrong conclusion despite it being logical.

We make political choices based more on opinions, which are only sometimes well founded, than factual knowledge. Monetary and fiscal policy is of vital importance, as well as the role of the state in the economy as the provider of universal public services, public banking, and control of sovereign money. Those who believe this is backward communist rhetoric and belong to the working class should think twice and realize that ideological prejudices can be used to prevent us from seeing factual reality.

The electoral campaign aims not to clarify but to plant and exploit real or imaginary fears. The demagoguery of moderate and centrist politicians uses the fear represented by extremist parties as their main political argument; the rest is more or less a recycled stream of lies. Liberal-leaning parties easily ally with right-wing extremists to form a government as long as they can pursue austerity policies and continue to push to privatize social security.

Electoral choices should be based on the electoral programs presented by the political parties because ideological voting in the strict sense is not advisable, and voting for an allegedly charismatic candidate or one with a successful political, corporate, or academic career is even worse. What matters most is the will to deliver what is promised in the electoral program.

The democracy that we don't have but need will have to be demanded by, exactly us. Firstly, electoral programs have to be respected and delivered. Political lies must be punished exemplarily, the vote of confidence that voters place in a political project must be respected, or representative democracy is nothing more than a farce that paves the way to fascism due to the accumulation of distrust towards mainstream politicians.

Most of what you write is self-evident; that is, it shouldn't even be necessary to write it. However, the obvious tends to become imperceptible or depreciated, which is more than enough reason for me to shed light on the obvious.

The intricate complexity of the problems we face is overwhelming; if we start by digging into what seems obvious, we can discover ways to decode and deconstruct what seems inaccessible or incomprehensible.

The ideological-cultural divisions and subdivisions exacerbate the tribalism and social divisionism which will continue to be instigated by the elites to maintain control of society.

The eventual gains in political agency through identity culture (woke culture) will never call into question the current order, because, in my view, the essence of our problems lies in socioeconomic disempowerment. The citizens forced to live in a permanent state of economic uncertainty and social insecurity, live in a mode of existential despair that can induce self-destructive behaviors and lead to suicide. I don't intend to diminish the problems of race, gender identity, or any other, but it seems clear that connecting the dots to form a systemic view of the root of the problems should be the priority.

sábado, 9 de dezembro de 2023

The Glass-Steagall Act was repealed in 1999 by President Bill Clinton, allowing the merger between investment banks and commercial banks responsible for the trend of finance taking up a greater and greater share of the economy. 

Extreme poverty was rising by the end of Clinton's term.  

The Clinton economy, in charts https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2012/09/05/the-clinton-economy-in-charts/

The FIRE sector (rentier class) gained more control of the economy by inflating fictitious wealth through the housing bubble. 

The result of the neoliberal Clinton miracle is still destroying the lives of millions. 

In most cases, wives play the role of first ladies, but Hilary Clinton did not want to be behind her husband concerning the responsibility of destroying the lives of millions by taking an active role in the neocon hegemony project.

quinta-feira, 7 de dezembro de 2023

Not even when the general public is aware of sensible ideas and projects with the potential to make society more sustainable, balanced, and fair do they become a political priority unless they serve vested interests?

The dominant narratives in our subconscious are responsible for how we perceive reality. These narratives are created and disseminated by the elites to manage the masses with promises that never go beyond cosmetic measures through managing hope, gradualism, incrementalism, and trickle-down economics.

It is common sense to sacrifice ourselves in the present to enjoy something we want in the future. This principle is weaponized by political demagoguery to promise what there is no intention of delivering. The integrity of representative democracy should involve the sacredness of electoral programs. The disrespect for the electorate begins with the fundamental issue of normalizing lies as part of the "art" of doing politics.

The future society is being conceived and designed in the present, and one of the inalienable principles is perpetuating the existing power structure.

Even if some substantial changes are implemented, they are designed to protect the interests of the plutoligarchy.

"Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has and never will. Find out exactly what any people will silently submit to, and you will discover the exact measure of injustice and evil imposed on them. It will continue until they are resisted with words or blows or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the resistance of those they oppress. Frederick Douglass

A social and ecological political economy capable of satisfying the needs of society as a whole within the boundaries of the biosphere is complicated to implement because:

1- the perception of reality is conditioned by dominant narratives.

2- dominant narratives are designed to defend the interests of dominant elites.

3- divergences between dominant narratives based on ideological incompatibilities rarely jeopardize the class unity that elites recognize as an existential issue.

4- Identity politics and woke culture are ideological-cultural tools that divide and tribalize the public and prevent the formation of organized movements focused on the underlying issues that affect the majority of the population, such as economic precariousness, exploitation, exhaustion, housing, debt, demoralization, helplessness which, despite being felt more intensely by certain minorities, are structural problems that erode the fabric of society.

5- the intentional militarization of language, politics, culture and arts is part of the strategy of emphasizing issues that, despite being relevant, obscure a comprehensive view of broader problems.

Technofeudalism or technofascism are political tools the capitalist class is more than happy to use to advance and reinforce the capital order.

In the West, industrial capitalism is being replaced by post-industrial capitalism, such as financial capitalism, the financialization of the economy and ecosystem services. The FIRE sector, asset management firms, cloud capital, CBDCs, etc., none call into question the capitalist system; instead, they reinforce it.

Yaroufakis correctly describes the new cloud capital economy, but claiming this represents a post-capitalist order is wrong. Capitalism reinvents itself by resorting to anti-democratic forms of governance, like overthrowing democratic governments to impose dictatorships, creating international institutions to set the so-called rules-based international order, etc.

New ways of accumulating wealth, concentrating power, and controlling the masses are emerging, but capitalism is the underlying order. 

We should focus on what is essential, which is the fight against capitalism, imperialism, neocolonialism, and, last but not least, the colonization of our minds. 

The central issue is the power imbalance; the institutions that should function as regulators are ineffective and, to a certain extent, part of the problem.

Individually, regulators like Bill Black are exceptions; most are more concerned with their career ambitions than the public good.

The priority must be to focus on two deficits that represent existential threats: the democratic deficit and the discernment deficit. And we have to start with discernment to deal with the democratic deficit.

For now, I see more signs of "embracing" fascism as salvation than of acquiring the knowledge necessary to develop the discernment to generate the unity indispensable to demand organized radical systemic/structural change.

domingo, 3 de dezembro de 2023

The UBI and the job guarantee are two sides of the same coin. Multiple reasons can lead people to professional and personal dead ends, and people should not be punished or even destroyed because of reasons that go far beyond bad personal choices. 

For example, my intellectual curiosity is highly eclectic; it is a necessity, not a choice. I am interested in a diversity of areas of knowledge to use as conceptual tools that help me analyze and interpret reality as factually as humanly possible.

To unravel the multilayers of propaganda, we need to master the basics of psychology, neuroscience, cognitive linguistics, logical fallacies, semiotics, geopolitics, economics, banking, monetary policies, the so-called free-market system, ecology, and the list could go on.

I was raised in a small village called Alcanena, Portugal, where the leather industry was the basis of the local economy. This highly polluting industry sparked my interest in ecology, botany, and medicinal plants, but for family reasons, my professional "career" began in a leather factory at the age of sixteen. 

I got married when I was 23, and since then, my professional "choices" have mostly revolved around the lesser of two evils, and it's tough to break out of this vicious circle. Of course, if I could go back, my priority would be to get a university degree, but when you live in a working-class environment, the understanding of the academic world is limited, and what we don't know doesn't appear on the list of choices.

sábado, 2 de dezembro de 2023

 The masses are indoctrinated by narratives designed to be convenient.

The culture of convenience and immediacy makes people impatient and uninterested in matters that require intellectual effort and prolonged attention.

The majority of subjects we should master to build a comprehensive understanding of the complexity of the stratagems that keep us divided, disorganized, and unable to act in a concerted way against the powers that control our lives and turn many of us into willing accomplices,  hoping that somewhere, somehow in the future, may we also be blessed with some of the privileges that those who exploit and oppress us enjoy.

quarta-feira, 25 de outubro de 2023

This comment earned me a warning from YouTube for violating community guidelines.

This answer was part of an already ongoing conversation.

This morning, I watched the video Tim Clancy on "Evidence of Terror Contagion - Role of Experiments, Confidence Building & Testing" https://youtu.be/bPtcWqsp47Q?si=M0Ca9YlTdPjWFk9n.

I do not question the (limited) validity of the methodology used.

The point is that "solutions" that intentionally or unintentionally leave out the root causes of problems always end up benefiting the powers that be.

The  DSM https://www.psychiatry.org/psychiatrists/practice/dsm offers an example of faulted diagnosis methods focused on healing the symptoms, using drugs that, in many cases, cause more harm than good because they ignore the underpinning complexity of social, economic, and cultural factors that cause cumulative psycho-affective disharmony that can degenerate into serious mental problems.

Obviously, there are mental disorders caused by genuine anatomical, physiological, and functional changes in the neurocognitive and biochemical neuronal systems.

We must be intellectually honest and take into account the implicit and explicit structural violence, the glue that keeps dysfunctional societies afloat.

By diagnosing problems based on "convenient" parameters to facilitate problem modeling while ignoring underlying systemic variables, we are not actually solving anything.

My life experience tells me that if we continue to be stuck in models that only give us partial answers, we are kicking the can down the road, making the hypothesis of the collapse of civilization more real with each passing day.

As an alternative, we have a technofascist transhumanist dystopia that will be sold to us based on the promise of human enhancement, health miracles, and even immortality.

Converging Technologies for Improving Human Performance Nanotechnology, Biotechnology, Information Technology, and Cognitive Science 2002 edition https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/bioecon-%28%23%20023SUPP%29%20NSF-NBIC.pdf

terça-feira, 24 de outubro de 2023

Eclectic insights of a self-taught maverick

Complex societies do not evolve or change based on ideas and projects due to their potential to make communities more sustainable, balanced, and fair but based on vested interests.

Individuals, families, groups, companies, organizations, institutions, governments, and supranational entities can and do influence public opinion to get support for implementing societal changes that often go against the best interests of the many.

It is logic and repetition, not reason nor veracity, behind the creation and spread of dominant subconscious narratives that determine how most of us perceive reality.

The dominant narratives do not have to be convergent; by omission or exaggeration, they seldom question the structural foundations that keep a dysfunctional system functioning. The dominant narratives are meant to divert, deceive, and divide.

The future society is being designed and shaped by people and institutions committed to perpetuating the present power structure.

Whenever radical demands threaten the wealth and power accumulated by national or transnational elites, such as demanding an equal distribution of wealth and power, the individuals, groups, organizations, and governments advocating for such outrageous demands are ridiculed, and their proposals are considered unrealistic.

Power and wealth go hand in hand in managing dominant cultural-ideological narratives to prevent ordinary citizens from feeling the need to understand reality through the lens of class dynamics.

“Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.” Frederick Douglass

Class consciousness is the indispensable cultural-ideological underpinning for a comprehensive understanding of how capitalist theology clouds reasoning and inhibits most people from feeling the need to seek the true causes of the structural problems facing humanity.

The sword of Damocles hangs over the survival of humanity.

If nothing is done to change the current political and economic paradigm, the rise of a dystopian, techno-fascist transhumanist society prescribed as salvation for humanity will be imposed in the face of widespread apathy.

Citizens deemed redundant and useless will ultimately fall victim to some form of adequately rationalized eugenics program. Reducing the ecological overshoot and mitigating the climate crisis will eventually be done using the principle of class meritocracy so that the upper dominant class can continue enjoying the privileges they feel entitled to while a substantial part of the lower dominated class must be eliminated.

Instead of debating a democratic solution for a more frugal, social, and ecological society based on an economy geared towards meeting essential needs and accessing universal public services, we are being deceived by far-right populist narratives targeting scapegoats to divert people from the systemic roots of the problems.

Plutoligarchs put the financial means at their disposal to control all areas of life in society.

Ideas, projects, initiatives, and programs that in any way challenge the power structure are discarded, slandered, and ignored. By dictating the dominant narratives, they can shape public perception to manufacture consent. The formation of mass movements based on class awareness is arguably the most feared nightmare capable of keeping elites awake at night.

The rentier elites, the plutocrats, the oligarchs, and the professional-managerial class resort to every possible strategy to prevent ordinary citizens, the working poor, and the lower middle class (a comprehensive group of people deprived of the means to have a dignified life) ) to be interested in the serious study of the inherent injustice of class-based societal systems and how the accumulation of capital requires territorial expansion (colonialism and imperialism), the subjugation of people (exploitation and slavery) and the predation of natural resources and raw materials ​​(plunder and ecocide).

I highly recommend reading “Capitalism in the Web of Life: Ecology and Capital Accumulation” by Jason W. Moore https://jasonwmoore.com/. 

terça-feira, 23 de maio de 2023

Some thoughts on and around economic degrowth

The degrowth movement must advocate a social and ecological political economy. Political and economic democracy based on a system of universal public services. Degrowth is a critique of capitalism as a system dependent on continuous economic growth, but also of productivism as the objective of economic activity.

The movement for degrowth must defend a model of social and ecological economy based on the precautionary principle. The economy must aim at providing goods, products and services essential to the well-being of the population within the limits of the biosphere. A model of political economy based on the pursuit of profit and the accumulation of wealth can never be sustainable. Capitalism is monopolistic by default and generates artificial scarcity, commodification is a way of barring access to goods, products, services, as well as spaces, based on the "fairness" of the user-pays concept.

The user pays concept is based on the false assumption of equal access. But a system that generates artificial scarcity prevents access to goods, products and services to the population that does not have the means to acquire them. Natural scarcity arises when products, goods or services do not exist in sufficient quantity to supply the population. Artificial or manufactured scarcity results from an economic system geared towards profit and the logic of market fundamentalism, which considers it preferable to deprive a part of the population of access to essential goods, products and services, rather than lowering the price or distributing them free of charge.

If the degrowth movement lets itself be parasitized, colonized or co-opted by an ecoliberal political consensus, it means the triumph of neoliberal ecofascism. Market fundamentalism, green capitalism, financialization of ecosystem services do not aim to save nature, but to perpetuate plutoligarchy, rentier class, FIRE sector and the interests associated with Anglo-American financial imperialism.

The definancialization of the economy is, in my view, a non-negotiable principle for sustainable degrowth. The degrowth movement must defend the democratization of the economy according to the principles of a social economy and a genuine ecological culture.

Ecoliberal ideology gives me the creeps. The last five decades of liberal democracy are paving the way to fascism based on the neoliberal doctrine. Liberal democracy is responsible for the financialization of the economy and the destruction of the social fabric. The movement for degrowth cannot follow the example of the environmental movement, to the point where we have green parties controlled by warmongers and supporters of the financialization of nature. The success of financial capitalism is the ability to co-opt, colonize, alter and use movements and organizations trusted by the public and turn them into instruments for implementing neoliberal policies.

Technological innovation can contribute significantly to reducing the environmental impact caused by economic activity, but we must not allow ourselves to be deceived by the ecoliberal ideology that defends sustainable growth, because for them what really matters is maintaining the current power structure. Technological innovation and increased productivity should serve to reduce working hours, offer universal public services and make society fairer and more ecological.

Unnecessary consumption requires natural resources, produces waste and pollution that can and should be avoided, as there are many goods, products and services that do not contribute anything to the well-being of the population, but exist based on the logic of profit seeking.

The projects supported by the European authorities are based on market solutions with the additional aggravating factor of introducing the financialization of ecosystem services. The core of official green policies is to keep the capitalist system untouched and allow biochemical processes and genetic materials to be converted into financial assets, so property rights over them can be claimed by private entities.

Private property, the pursuit of profit, capital accumulation and the global dominance of finance capital over the real economy, based on the doctrine of market fundamentalism are the pillars of modern liberal democracies. Ecoliberalism does not intend to change this situation, it intends to extend it to everything that can be commodified.

Is Europe reactivating a war economy as part of the project for a greener economy? Cui bono with the revitalization of a war economy?

When there is political will, there are always alternatives. The war economy only interests the plutoligarchs who are willing to do anything to maintain the international order based on the hegemony of western financial and military imperialism. The western plutoligarchy prefers to bring humanity to the brink of a nuclear war, instead of embarking on the diplomatic path to create a new (irreversible) international geopolitical order.

In the temples of capitalism, City of London and Wall Street, the priestly rentier class and the FIRE sector realized that they could explore a much more profitable capitalist strand than industrial capitalism, the financial capitalism, putting into practice the neoliberal doctrine and taking advantage of the modern information technologies.

The liberalization of the economy (globalization) aimed to allow the relocation of production to countries with cheap labor (creation of special trade zones) and the recolonization of the Global South with investment projects for the plunder of natural resources and raw materials.

Ecoliberalism is the green facade of neoliberal ecofascism, which will never challenge the established powers, on the contrary, it will support the so-called green growth and discard any solution that implies the definancialization of the economy and implements a social and ecological economy for the common good based on the provision of universal basic services.

The degrowth principle will never work in a market fundamentalist system. What should be produced, or banned, has to come from democratic political choices. People cannot be compelled by necessity (manufactured scarcity) to accept jobs that go against their principles, conscientious objection must be extended to the world of economic activity.

The movement for degrowth must defend the allocation of UBI as a fundamental contribution for society to choose the economic activities that should be discontinued and prohibited without affecting the well-being of citizens.

Ecoliberalism, the promotional cover of green capitalism, defends massive investments in the so-called green transition and the involvement of financial capital in the process. A system that depends on economic growth has to promote economic growth.

The commitment to sustainable innovative technological solutions within the scope of the economy’s decarbonization strategy (ridiculous slogan) aims to maintain the superfluous consumer society as a given. The pursuit of profit and capital accumulation, the primacy of private property and proprietary rights will never be called into question. Financial markets and the financialized economy are a kind of sacred cows, beyond the comprehension of the common citizen, to be worshiped rather than challenged.

The degrowth that no one wants to talk about is the one imposed on the lower working class through rising inflation and political and fiscal austerity measures. This form of real economic degrowth has been practiced for decades without being seriously debated. Green capitalism will make the situation worse because the green transition is not programmed to make society fairer but to guarantee the perpetuation of the privileges of the affluent classes.

The energy transition must take place but oriented towards the implementation of a social and ecological economy, an economy of sobriety. The cult of opulence, luxury and vanity must be penalized rather than idolized. The sobriety society should abound with opportunities for citizens to meet basic needs without having to cause unnecessary suffering or deal with systemic cruelty.

The movement for degrowth must prioritize the reduction of poverty and social inequality, scarcity manufactured by capitalism and the consumption of superfluous and luxury goods, products and services. Other priorities: availability of universal public services, public housing, free public transport and reduced working hours.

The degrowth movement must support the economic development of the so-called Global South. Economic development to meet the needs of the population is fundamental, the problem is the model of development and over-consumption.

The governments and populations of each country need to identify the most strategic sectors of the national economy and design a development plan in which activities that are proven to be harmful to the environment and that require massive imports of raw materials are avoided, unless in cases where this is justified.

“The world has enough for everyone's need, but not enough for everyone's greed.”— Mahatma Gandhi

The economy can produce enough to satisfy human needs without destroying the environment. Society must not tolerate the absurdity of protecting the right of some citizens to own luxury goods and properties in an unparalleled display of ostentation with a disgraceful ecological footprint.

The genuine advocates of abolishing these privileges are not driven by envy. Those who make these statements do not understand that some people do not feel the slightest desire to own this type of goods and privileges. Many people seek socio-professional, economic and financial security because society is merciless towards those who put freedom in the first place . Furthermore, simplicity and frugality with freedom can be the best source of genuine joie de vivre.

Injustice, inequality, manufactured scarcity, unnecessary suffering, uncertainty, cruelty, desensitization, dehumanization, intolerance and commodification inhibit and destroy the natural joy of living. When society becomes a dehumanized reality, individual and collective psycho-affective (biosociocultural) well-being is profoundly affected and people are compelled to make comparisons based on possession and privilege because that is the only form of social recognition that really matters and everyone knows it, even if most avoid talking about it.

The degrowth movement must defend a model of economy and society that values ​​a slower lifestyle. The frenzy must be replaced by the opportunity to savor life. The commodified society offers solutions to all kinds of problems, including the possibility of recovering psycho-emotional balance, physical fitness and spiritual well-being, but as part of a consumer society and not for a society of true well-being.

The underlying mindset makes us look for solutions requiring to adapt to the demands of a dysfunctional system rather than questioning the causes of the problems. We've all been told to complain less and do more. But most of the time, doing more means having to comply with the system we'd like to see changed. But to change the system you need a plan, unity and organization.

We are mentally conditioned to seek solutions within the framework of the system, what to do when the problem is the system itself, as is the case with the current model of society? Economic growth is the dominant dogma, we need to create more wealth to have a bigger pie to share. Most continue to confuse capital accumulation with wealth, but what we really need to satisfy basic needs is true wealth, capital accumulation is a source of power and control.

What should be considered wealth? Money? Or, the essential goods, products and services? In a financialized economy, investment banks, trust companies and asset managers, insurance companies, stock exchanges, financial markets control the economy, for example, the FIRE sector (basically, a rentier class) is responsible for real estate speculation that generates an inflationary spiral in the price of housing and rent.

If we could isolate a country with a financialized economy, it would quickly become evident that the wealth created by the financial sector, which only benefits 10% of the population, is virtual wealth created in a parallel dimension. Essential goods, products and services are produced by the real economy, which could and should have access to public funding to develop productive, socially fair and environmentally sustainable projects, instead of having a financial sector controlled privately plundering the real economy, destroying the fabric of society and trying to control nature.

Unfortunately, we live in a reality where virtual wealth acquires control of real assets through proprietary rights. The current financial system is based on normalizing financial fraud, financial market wizards create virtual wealth by turning everything into financial assets. The real economy and society as a whole are being driven to be completely enslaved by the financial matrix.

Capitalist societies resort to manufactured scarcity to coerce citizens to accept social and work conditions that are at the root of many of the mental health problems faced by our societies. Continuous stress, existential despair, meaninglessness lives, endemic poverty, etc. The mere need to survive turned into torture.

In capitalist economies dominated by neoliberal ideology, the wealth created is channeled upwards, while the working poor and the middle class have been losing purchasing power despite the immense "wealth" produced by the financial sector.

Capitalist economic systems apply the principle of competition to society as a justification for imposing a bottleneck rule on the poorest in accessing essential goods, products and services. For example, housing is an essential need, but the market treats housing as a mere tradable good (commodity) subject to financial speculation inflating the value of homes and rents, increasing the difficulty for poor families to access housing. The real estate market illustrates clearly how the rentier class accumulates wealth without creating value, that is, without adding anything to the real economy. Market controlled access to housing produces artificial scarcity in order to maximize profit. Wealth should be measured by the economy's ability to meet the needs of citizens and not by a monetary metric that benefits the rentier class. The GDP of financialized economies is disconnected from the performance of the real economy and does not serve as a reliable indicator of social well-being.

A degrowth movement that wants to be credible has to be anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist and anti-classist. Ecoliberal degrowth means more sacrifices for the working class because the ultimate goal is to protect the plutoligarchy.

The degrowth movement must defend participatory democracy, the definancialization of the economy and a classless society. If we allow ourselves to be fooled by a neo-bourgeois version of degrowth imposed from the top down by an elite of bureaucrats and technocrats aligned with the interests of green capitalism, we will have degrowth in the form of manufactured scarcity imposed on the “inferior” classes, including the useless class (Yuval Noah Harari). The goal is to move towards an ecological macro-economy without growth (steady state economy) based on the precautionary principle.

Neoclassical economists are not willing to put their reputations on the line to defend a degrowth economic paradigm. Nature represents value, nature is an asset. A free nature is anathema in the age of ecosystem services financialization. In the end what is at stake is to preserve the system and defend the interests of capitalist class.

The degrowth movement must defend technological innovation and scientific research that serve a social and ecological economy for a well-being society. Currently, techno-scientific development serves capital accumulation and power concentration, which is the same as saying that science is totalitarian and monopolistic. Scientific research and technological innovation, like all activities motivated by the pursuit of profit, transform economic activity into a destructive force, no matter the color of the facade.

The power imbalance between social classes makes it extremely easy to discredit, isolate and silence dissident voices and ideas, as well as making alternative projects unfeasible. Ecoliberalism will never question capital accumulation and the primacy of private property, it is delusional to believe that the ecoliberal class will implement policies aiming to democratize power relations, abolish class society and dismantle a culture in which nature is perceived as a reservoir of resources to be looted, commodified and transformed into capital.

Degrowth aims to reduce the environmental impact of human economic activities by reducing the consumption of natural resources, raw materials and energy, while promoting changes in production models and methods and consumption habits. The distribution of wealth must be done through universal public services, definancialization of the economy, public banking, sovereign currency issuance, including the use of this prerogative to inject money into the economy through the UBI, and a job guarantee program with the reduction of working hours.

Public investment in the real economy, that is, in the production of basic goods, products, services and in the construction of essential infrastructure to meet the needs of the population. Speculation and usury must be outlawed, activities and behaviors that feed on the socio-economic or psycho-emotional vulnerabilities of our fellow citizens must be considered crimes against humanity. The unlimited accumulation of wealth and the primacy of private property pave the way to idolizing sociopaths, psychopaths and unscrupulous opportunists. The ad nauseam repetition of epithets like meritocracy, entrepreneurship, democracy, freedom, free-markets does not change the reality. The problem is systemic, being easier to seduce, pervert and/or subjugate a thousand honest citizens than to rehabilitate an unscrupulous opportunist.

Degrowth policies for a steady state economy must be in the public domain. The myth that an interventionist state is incompatible with civil society initiatives is absurd. The state has the democratic duty to regulate and manage democratic policies for the promotion of a social and ecological economy. The decentralization of power does not mean handing it over to the private sector, but to local communities. It is a fact that our societies lack democratic participation and that makes the lower classes more vulnerable. More participatory democracy and more participatory economics require more political responsibility.

Existing or future leftist parties and organizations must include in their manifesto guidelines for a social and ecological political economy, which means that the economy must meet the basic needs of the population within the limits of the carrying capacity of the biosphere. If we allow ourselves to be deceived by ecoliberal or similar ideas, we will have an increasingly unequal society. Adherents of green capitalism will be strong advocates of increasing the environmental tax burden. The plutoligarchic class will continue to enjoy obscene privileges, while the majority of the population will be sacrificed with draconian austerity policies. Ecoliberalism paves the way for ecofascism and if we do nothing within a few decades we will live under a transhumanist techno-fascist dictatorship.

To be fair, the transition to a social and ecological economy has to be based on anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist and anti-classist policies. What is at stake is sharing the burden democratically by promoting a culture for a less consumerist society. We also need to change the educational paradigm “The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them”. -Albert Einstein. The left must not present degrowth as a panacea to solve civilizational problems, degrowth is a political instrument to help correct the course of a dysfunctional society model. If we let the ecoliberals lead this process, which is what is happening, the degradation of living conditions will deepen, not only in access to goods, products and services, but also in everything that identifies us as humans.

Most of the solutions presented to solve environmental problems are based on or depend on technological innovation. China is an example of a society with a large-scale economy committed to being a world leader in technological innovation, while maintaining the productivist consumerist economic paradigm, which means that the overshoot problem will be aggravated. Technological innovation at the service of a society of opulence and superfluous consumption is not the way forward, much less the example to be followed by the left. The energy transition based on renewable energies has to be accompanied by a reduction in consumption, because the raw materials have to be extracted or mined somewhere.

Conquering territories, destroying ecosystems, exterminating species in favor of economic growth motivated by the pursuit of profit and the need to feed an insatiable society is something totally irrational. A model of society in which citizens feel entitled to satisfy any kind of whim 24/7 is an arrogant principle. Believing that there shouldn't be limits is a dangerous and delusional idea, limits exist and sooner or later they manifest themselves in the form of catastrophes, pandemics or irreversible changes in biological, climatic and geological systems.

The technological civilization is here to stay and only generalized systemic collapse can dictate its end. Earth is a planet transformed by technology in the insane pursuit of profit and capital accumulation. To control the problem we need to reflect on the connection between the pursuit of profit, capital accumulation, concentration of power and technological innovation. Technological innovation is a source of power, it is no coincidence that many technological innovations arise as the result of scientific research in the military area. In a reality of great power competition, military supremacy is the determining factor to impose an imperialist political and economic-financial order. If we fail to develop a geopolitical order based on cooperation and demilitarization, humanity has no future. The problem is systemic and will not be resolved by merely greening the economy.

The collective West is historically responsible for the current geopolitical chaos, and instead of participating in the creation of a new international geopolitical order for the development of a social and ecological economy, the Western imperialists insist on maintaining the rules-based neocolonialist order at all costs, including the possibility of nuclear annihilation.

The focus should be on the development of a just and egalitarian society based on a political-ideological system that recognizes limits, on consumption, wealth accumulation, private property, inheritance, intellectual property and patent rights.

When there are no limits to the growth of wealth accumulation, there are also no limits to the growth in the number of the left behind. Western societies are heading towards the fascist abyss, because the elites, instead of admitting the need to change the system, make us swallow green capitalism as the solution. A solution that will aggravate social inequality, will not solve the environmental problems and will increase the overshoot and postpones the collapse for a while.

Believing that we can maintain the current civilizational paradigm based on the blind faith in techno-scientism and technological innovation proves how vulnerable the human species is to ideological-cultural delusions.

What should be the top priority is the development of a society with principles and values ​​different from those that currently shape human behavior. To eradicate poverty we need economic development, which is correct, but what kind of economic development? Economic development to satisfy essential needs is one thing and economic growth to accumulate wealth is another. The eradication of poverty involves a fairer distribution of the wealth created, and true wealth is the products, goods and services essential to satisfy society's needs. Capital is not wealth, it is an instrument of power and that is why it is so dangerous and causes so much destruction.

The economy is part of society, as society is part of nature. Structuring the economy to meet the needs of society without destroying nature must be the mission of any system of political economy. The duty of the free market is to extract wealth to be accumulated by the plutoligarchic class.

The ecoliberal class is working hard on the financialization (privatization) of ecosystem services, to make us pay, as with the privatization of universal public services, for the right to access "services" provided by nature. This is yet another fraud set up by the gurus of the financial system, based on the user-pays principle taken to the extreme. The objective is not to save the environment, but to transform nature into financial assets, using the so-called ecosystem services as a reason to tax consumers as yet another source of enrichment for the rentier class and the FIRE sector.

The movement for degrowth must defend the definancialization of the economy. The speculative "economy" should be banned, 90% of the population is harmed by this form of financial parasitism.

The degrowth movement must defend a geopolitical economy based on international cooperation with the aim of: 1- Rationalize the consumption of energy, natural resources and raw materials. 2- Encourage the relocation of production. It makes no sense to import what can be produced locally with identical quality and resource savings. 3- Stimulate technical-scientific cooperation in the search for solutions to implement a steady state economy.

The pursuit of profit distorts the true objective of the economy, which must be to satisfy the basic needs of the population. The idea of ​​having countries that function as factories to supply the world is absurd.

Degrowth aims to question the idea of ​​unlimited growth. The mentors of green capitalism deceive the public with ideas of green mega-projects as a solution to the problem of global warming, without ever questioning the existing societal order and the current political economy system. Carbon dioxide is labeled public enemy and following a recurring pattern, a relentless war is declared against CO2.

The transition to a green economy presented to us does not foresee a radical change in the system that created the problem and the degrowth movement has the obligation to expose the hypocrisy and tricks of a system focused on expanding the scope of financial predation to the core of biological and geoclimatic processes in order to capitalize on them.

One of the roles of the degrowth movement is to challenge preconceived ideas that regulate the way we understand reality and adapt to it. Neoliberalism, market fundamentalism remains the dominant ideology. An ideology that demonizes the role of the State and glorifies the supposed efficiency of markets. The free market assumes that the law of supply and demand makes economies more efficient without ever mentioning that there are no markets free from manipulation.

During the reign of Thatcher-Reagan, the neoliberal doctrine was imposed as the dominant culture for a new era of prosperity. The concept of dominant culture describes the implicit perception patterns that normalize a certain reality conditioning human behavior to adapt to it.

The TINA dogma imposed during the reign of Thatcher-Reagan has to be deconstructed once and for all so that we can focus on democratizing the economy and dignifying the lives of the common citizenry. It is time for the productivity gains achieved with technological innovation be used to implement a social and ecological economy.

Inter-generational solidarity is one of the structural pillars for a welfare society. Caring for all those who need social support, in childhood, old age, illness or any other situation of vulnerability is the cornerstone for just and fair society. The professional work in the area of ​​social assistance must essentially be done by genuinely motivated people who must be duly rewarded and socially recognized.

The role of the family and the community continues to be extremely important, the children should grow up with the feeling of belonging to a living community, contrasting with the current social atomization culture.

Sovereign currency must be created by the national treasury and used to fund universal basic services, social security, UBI, guaranteed employment program, construction and maintenance of essential infrastructure, public housing and all the rest required for a functional steady state economy.

A network of public banks with the aim of financing the needs of the real economy, that is, individual, collective or community projects that contribute to a social and ecological economy.

The International bank transfers must be regulated in a way that respects national sovereignty.

A predatory, neocolonialist and imperialist financial system like the one that exists must be eliminated. Financial markets are arguably the worst man-made system, dominated by a plutoligarchy rentier class enslaving the humanity.

We have to create a banking, monetary, financial and tax system that is simple, transparent, fair, functional and democratic. “Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws.” - Mayer Amschel Rothschild. This quote illustrates the role of money in controlling society. The creation and management of money is vital and letting that power fall into the hands of the private sector is fatal.

Issuing currency requires just a few strokes on a computer keyboard. This is how more than 95% of the money in circulation is created, in most cases by private banks. The UBI is a way for governments to put money into circulation in the real economy. Inflation can be controlled by increasing taxation, which is how money is destroyed to "cool down" the economy. Combating inflation can also be done by imposing restrictions on the consumption of superfluous goods, products and services, especially imported ones.

The relocation of the economy must be a priority. Public, cooperative and social banks must create lines of credit available to citizens and communities to invest in productive (non-speculative) projects and economic activities based on short cycles of production and consumption.

A social and ecological economy must give citizens more freedom to choose a different professional path, because not all citizens feel fulfilled dedicating their entire existence to a single career or activity and, instead of being penalized, they should have the possibility of having different experiences as a way of giving meaning and purpose to their lives.

UBI helps citizens to have more freedom to choose non-monetized activities, develop more creative projects and seek to give more meaning and purpose to their existence. For reasons of equity in the sharing of tasks that are considered less desirable it may be necessary to draw up a democratic plan to regulate some civic and social obligations. There has to be a balance between individual freedom and the need to meet the needs of the community. The social and ecological economy requires the contribution of each one of us so that we can all have a more dignified existence in a fairer society.

In financialized neoliberal economies, the working poor have long lived in degrowth mode, austerity is a political instrument to enforce manufactured scarcity. It is simply impossible to make a transition to a more ecological and just society while maintaining the current power structure. The degrowth movement must advocate for a participatory economy and the imposition of a ceiling on the accumulation of wealth and property. An economy with limits is a society with a future.

The neoliberal regime imposed as the rules-based international order by the Anglo-American financial imperialism transformed the vast majority of sovereign countries into vassals of the globalized capital.

Open economies, foreign investment, unrestricted capital circulation, market liberalization result in loss of sovereignty. National governments are prevented from taking protectionist measures for fear of capital flight, currency devaluation, collapse of the banking system, worsening financing conditions, political isolation and economic sanctions.

A political-ideological movement for a political economy based on sobriety has to go through cooperative agreements between countries for a society of sufficiency. The purpose of the idea of ​​degrowth is not to impede development, but to avoid excess and waste, the culture of sobriety aims to make citizens aware that the consumerist culture cannot continue on the terms we are used to. More cooperation and less competition, demilitarization and definancialization of the economy.

The degrowth movement must be based on the implementation of a social and ecological political economy. Green capitalism is adding more gasoline to the fire and a productivist socialist political economy following the model of a westernized consumer society is equally wrong. The idea of ​​degrowth is, above all, the awareness of the need to build an ecological society.