U.S. Capitalist Party

One of the founding fathers of the United States, John Adams, rarely mentioned today, was important enough to be the first Vice President to George Washington and our second President. He wrote a little bit about constitutional laws and principals. The main idea of a Republic is to keep all power from collecting in one center. History taught us that to accomplish this we have to divide the power between the three classes of people: Democratic, Capitalist and Government.

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Reading the classics teaches one the basic principles on which our world was established. This has nearly all been lost in the fog of time past. All that remains are syllogysms and subjunctives it seems. In my BLOGs, i attempt to incorporate principals that are the real basis underlying civilizations as contrasted with the mythology we learn in our childhoods that goes unreflected. About me as a person: I enjoy wine(organic)and pizza (organic), and in the morning a nice strong cup of coffee - organic and fair trade whenever I can get it. I started cooking a lot more lately.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Sovereign v.s. Democracy

It is somewhat disturbing how words get so confounded that their meanings are generalized to accomodate ideas that are disadvantageous in any rational discourse to have to disentangle. There is probably a social agenda inherent in such convolutions, which protects social norms from reason. Obviously, since what exactly are the influences that determine the behavior of the social animal is known by a strictly ignored few, reason is perennially incapable of penetrating the social awareness at an effective level.

On the one hand are the Cerberus hounds that guard the social leviathan, the one the use of force, termed the political. The other is reward, which we currently term capitalism. But these guards serve only to maintain the social creature within its own form. They are powerless to actually influence the social beast, except with the greatest effort over unbearably long periods of time, which most citizens will not tolerate. Regimes that attempt to influence their citizenry are termed repressive, since they do not really change the social form, they simply repress its expression.

Two terms that are really troubling are 'democratic' and, what most people actually mean when they use the term, which is 'sovereign'.

"Thirdly, there is the will of the people or the sovereign will, which is general both with regard to the state considered as a whole and with regard to the government considered as part of the whole." (Jean-Jacques Rousseau, "The Social Contract", 1762, p108).

The sovereign is synonymous with the terms 'social animal' or 'leviathan'. the term democratic implies a governmental form where the government is entirely in the hands of the people, where there is no aristocratic class or branches of government other than a 'House of Representatives'. In most oligarchical or totalitarian forms of government, the term 'democracy' is used liberally by all active in the actual repression of the democratic class of society. For instance in the U.S. recently, the dictator completely disregarded the power of check by the House of Representatives in its veto of the war spending legislation. If the democratic were the dominant power in this nation, the House of Representatives would have the greater authority over the dictator, which is obviously not the case.

But, getting back to the distinction between 'sovereign' and 'democratic', the sovereign is the power of the state as a whole. The democratic, the capitalistic, and the governmental are all parts of this whole. In an informed republic for instance, each of these classes would have an equal share of the power. In the U.S., the governmental class has way too much of the sovereign power and dictates to the rest, which goes against the nature of the sovereign or social animal and is ultimately repressive.

It would be difficult even to call this nation an oligarchy, since the dominant economic player is the military industrial complex, which is technically capitalist, but it is not a form of capital that contributes to the wealth of the country, as defined by Ricardo or Smith as " the sum of necessaries, conveniences and luxuries in a nation", failing to contribute to the wealth of the nation, these industries fail to be part of the 'reward' segment of the sovereign and align perfectly with the 'force' segment.

Considering the failure to comprehend the mechanics (organics?) of the social animal, it is impossible to truly alter its behaviour and all that the state is capable of, is repressing it. In the modern world (post modern is really nothing other than alienation from reason) the social animal has failed to adopt behaviours consistent with what is obviously rational, what modern science and technology have brought to light, and what industry has conceived. To accomodate this disfunctionality, two primary escape mechanisms have emerged. The one is blatant bigotry, under the paliative of 'conservatism', which pouts about religious and racial alienation and considers that a sufficient argument to attack anything diverging from the anachronistic social form. The other escape mechanism is the aforementioned 'post modernism' which basically is a style of phyronism, or a rejection of reason in light of any incidence of exception, which allows the individual to flow along with the social form and associate only with whatever reason opportunity happens to allow.

Aristotle was not really wrong about social change being something to approach with caution, but at the same time, forcing a disfunctional social form on a people by empowering the political to the disadvantage of reward is a losing game. Reason will not go away with time. Where there are concrete facts and principles that are near certainties and repeatable ad infinitum, ignoring the finite is not a responsible policy, especially for a large or powerful state. With regard to the immutable, the social form must adapt to it, or waste energy and freedom and promote immorality sustaining the ignorance of it.

The European Union, managed within three years time to change the form of currency in most of Europe to one universal currency from many. This is a major social change that was readily adopted and with great benefit to all players (although they have not done away with the institution of interest, which is not based on any principal with a fiat money).

[For this later () comment, there is a solution. A fiat money is actually the property of the sovereign itself, which is everyone. So no one individual or institution has any right to collect an interest, since that is ultimately a de-facto tax. On the other hand, all three segments of the sovereign state have a right to one third of the social product. If banking insists on charging interest on money, the people should be exempt from an income tax. That would leave banking and capital to battle it out for profit and government would be reduced to collecting taxes strictly from banking and capital and have an incentive to ensure that banking is not repressive of productive capital, which was the point of the control of interest by the 'Fed' in the first place. The only other alternative is for government to completely take over the banking industry and make it a branch of government, but that is idealistic and would distort the sovereign state into a dictatorship even further.]

Where reason contradicts the social form, the reasonable will follow reason. And as Aristotle says: "A man will receive less benefit from changing the law than damage from becoming accustomed to disobey authority". This is highly relevant to the social context as well. As social norms diverge from rational and moral behavior, individuals become increasingly accustomed to being dyssocial and not following social norms becomes problematic when social norms become dictated politically.

Buying organic food is such a deviation. The political was active in repressing the transgenetic labeling of food for individuals trying to make moral choices. The pro choice political movement was repressed by government trying to adhere to an era when women were considered the equivalent of slaves and forbidden to make moral choices. Overpopulation is a greater immoral fact than the destruction of a fetus. That the CIA has considered it reasonable to investigate global warming and resource exhaustion as sources of military conflict is proof enough that having babies will lead to the murder of sentioned adults.

These are only two examples of reasonable and moral choices being actively repressed by the use of force. That organic food is more expensive though it cost less to produce is another indication that the reward aspect of society is diminishing with respect to the forced aspect along the lines of moral and rational choices. And with respect to supply and demand, the cost of an abortion must be growing astronomic, if one includes the cost of travel and lodging that probably accompanies such a choice today.

That the European Union has abandoned the death penalty and its use in the U.S. has increased dramatically since the 1970s is evidence also of the rise of the use of force against reason. Does unnecessary war and trivial vengeance war in place of diplomacy not also show an abusive level of political force to the exclusion of reward mechanisms for maintaining the social security? This is all difficult to resolve as 'democratic'. It suggests that we as free individuals living in a state with liberty as its foundation, prefer to be forced to conform to irrational norms, rather than be rewarded for conforming to rational norms. Would not a democracy prefer to be rewarded for conforming to rational norms? A sovereign state that has no real control over its social charge on the other hand, may tend to force conformance to dysfunctional norms and impose these anachronistic and immoral 'norms' even upon those willing to give up their social identity to adhere to a more reasonable and moral code.

These are distinctions that need to be recognized.

Peace:

Ca Te Go Re Ya Ho Wa Le Ni Bo Su Po Mo Fe E I A U O Xi Qo Ke Ju Da Vi Ze

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Sunday, May 06, 2007

Organic

Organic is another one of those terms that most people today haven't a clue as to what it means. Originally, the term 'Organic' was synonymous with 'mechanic', but was used more as an adjective as the word 'organical' synonymous with 'mechanical'. The term evolved to express its current general meaning from its use to describe biological appendages, such as 'the eyes were the organ of sight' which at that time meant that the eyes were the mechanism of sight. In fact the musical instrument we know as the 'organ' meant primarily that it was a mechanical instrument. All this information and more can be found in the book "Keywords" by Raymond Williams.

Today, the term 'organic' has taken on a new, politically forced meaning that defines food and cosmetics as having been produced without the use of chemical inputs or transgenetic engineering. This is actually a naive, but consistent meaning with the original. Let me explain:

In modern (postmodern?) agriculture, everything is based upon linear (and limited) inputs. Fossil fuels are the main input in agriculture and supply everything from the fuel to power the tractors that: plow the fields, till the fields, fertilize the fields, plant the seeds, spray the pesticides - which are produced from fossil fuels, harvest the crops and preliminarily process the food. Fossil fuels are again used to transport the crops to the main processors and from the main processors to the distributors. The distributors use fossil fuels to transport the finished goods to the retail outlets. Fossil fuels are again used by the majority of the consumers to transport the food from the retailer to their main location of consumption.

And thats not all. There are other inputs besides fossil fuels in (post)modern agriculture. There are the fertilizers. A main fertilizer, which consumes immense quantities of energy is ammonia, which is split off from the nitrogen in the air using the Haber process, and combined with hydrogen, which is split off from water. Both processes use immense quantities of electricity which comes most often from coal - a fossil fuel.

In addition, there are mineral inputs, often originating in countries with insufficient agricultural output to even feed their own people. Nutrients such as phosphorus, potassium, sulfur and magnesium and so forth... The thing about all these inputs is that agriculture is no longer a self sustaining system, it is a linear process that requires immense quantities of limited inputs.

In other words, agriculture is unsustainable, that is, we can only feed ourselves now while supplies of inputs last and billions of people will starve in the relatively near future. And those who will starve the most severely will be those who live in the fossil fuel dependent nations.

Doom and gloom for sure, but that is why people are opting for 'organic' food. Not because it is healthier, contains more nutrients, much less pesticide residue and is based on food stuff we evolved to eat (and due to many concerned people investing in 'Organic' over the past 30 years - good tasting too), but because it is a step in the direction toward a mechanical or systematic form of agriculture, one that treats the natural world as a mechanical system rather than a processing facility. Do we make this choice to treat nature as a system consciously, or do we base our decision on those other benefits?

Organic is not a word that means 'pure' or 'healthy' or 'science free'. In fact, organic agriculture is much more science intensive than post modern agriculture, which is based upon a standardized set of operating procedures, just like any other factory. Organic agriculture is based upon understanding how an agricultural ecosystem works and managing the system to emphasize its strengths, rather than make some foolish attempt to dominate the system and bend it to the will of humanity.

Philosophically, conventional agriculture is completely backward. Human beings function in a moral capacity, consciously mitigating our behaviour such that we treat others as ends and not simply means to our own ends. Conventional agriculture expects nature to behave morally and then dispenses punishments when nature functions mechanically, which is how nature functions. Funny how we treat people as if we should behave mechanically and nature as if it should behave morally. Can we be any more wrong?

Organic agriculture is not a magic bullet for human stupidity, but it is a step in the right direction for those of us who desire to live in a sensible and moral state. Organic food is still highly dependent upon fossil fuels, but at least the true organic farmers are concerned to reduce those inputs and work towards a sustainable form of food production before the planet runs out of fossil fuels. The term 'Locally grown' is cropping up more and more - no pun intended.

Many of the other inputs such as pesticides and fertilizers are science and system-strategy based and are focused upon using the energy inherent in the biotic systems of nature rather than inputing energy gleaned from fossil fuels. Organic depends more on using our minds rather than the muscle of fossil fuels. Farms are incidentally one of the likely places to find wind power machines, demonstrating that farmers are concerned about energy inputs. Agriculture is one of the more energy intensive of human activities and because of this dependence it is a serious concern for civil societies to run out of fuel.

The Roman empire collapsed as a direct consequence of the loss of its North African grain production states to the Vandals. It never recovered after that and the Goths and other smaller tribes in the area overran the empire, which could no longer sustain huge armies or invest manpower in great works. This is the same thing that will happen to the current world if it insists upon ignoring sustainable forms of energy, and sustainable forms of agriculture.

Organic food is the direction of focus for those of us who do not wish to see civilization collapse again.

Peace