I've stayed home from work, the last two days. There have been -30 windchills, temps as low as -7. It snows each night, hard, dry snow that when compacted becomes glare ice you'ld be safer to skate on. Local roads become rutted, worse than gravel roads studded by constant heavy traffic, bone jarring (in my old van). The freeways become spin-out zones. Who wants to get stuck, stall out? Yeah we have cell phones (not everybody) and yeah people will arrive to help (for a fee). But... I have the luxury of staying home, as the company I work for has no immediate need for me - though I am on call. I don't get paid except for the hours I work. I haven't done much these two days, but move about the Internet, reading this and commenting that, thinking, eating, writing. Being lazy.
What sort of economy have we built,
that people have to work today? Tonight it's supposed to snow an inch
or two, with temps as low as -14. What do you suppose the roads will
be like tomorrow? Wouldn't it be safest if everybody just stayed
home?
What heresy! Seriously though, what
have we built? The agents of the Federal Reserve are playing with
fire, this very cold winter, as Kunstler so clearly called out (harsh, clever and direct even by Tyler Durden standards.) So
what, we have to light a fire to feed this debt burdened economy, to
make it grow, more mining, more nuclear, more fracking, more
consuming, that it might serve what – bankers? You might as well
tell me I am serving mammon, for how much I want to be serving the
fiat Dollar right now, today. Granted, some have to work today, like
many of my co-workers, caretaking those who can't take care of
themselves. But otherwise, there isn't that much that NEEDS to be
done right now, for the majority, and those who are working should
get paid more, eh? How's that for sensible? But bankers have no
sympathies, nor do corporations, nor government. This economy cannot
stop. It will not stop!
Exclamation point. I was commenting on
Huffpost today, called “sigh - another economic illiterate” by
one cMontalvo. His cornucopian vision for the maintenance and restoration of the
status quo economic-growth paradigm, is mining under the sea for
fresh water, and industrial nuclear fusion. I replied, among other
things, based on his avatar, "a rose is just a rose, unless it has
teeth, in which case it lives on blood and not soil fertility" (of course as you can see, it is really a urinal shaped like a female mouth shaped like a rose)
(and Huffpost thinks a third of my comments are beyond the pale.) Shortly after that I learned that HuffPost is requiring all
commenters to sign in to Facebook to verify you are who you say you
are (and perhaps cut down on some of the trolling.) I haven't signed
into Facebook in perhaps a year. That was fun. More and more I wonder
about this all-seeing-eye, this economic juggernaut that knows
everything digital about me.
A letter came from work, today. I
missed the dead-line, for signing up for benefits for 2014. Oops.
They put a letter in my in-box a few weeks ago, though I notice they
didn't seek me out at the last minute. No doubt they feel backstopped
by the Affordable Care Act, and are fine, to not have to pay their
share of my coverage. Which is fine. I am ambivalent, insofar as I
already pay a considerable amount of social security (which is paying
for this business to exist), and I am curious about how the government
will respond to me not carrying insurance. Curious, that hardly
anyone assumes social security will provide for my retirement or
care, but that everyone assumes Institutional Health Care including
Insurance will be here, 30 years from now. I live as if
comparatively little of it will, and take care of myself more or less
as if I will never have access to institutional health care. (Acting
as if the SUNstead will be all of that for me.)
No one commented last time (except UB and Surly1 on the Diner), which is
partly why I wonder; would you think I was crazy if I said future
generations were telling us to exploit uranium, drain and pollute
aquifers and surface waters, mine in sulfide beds and shale and under
the sea, and buy plastic crap to throw into landfills and burn and
plasticize the ocean with, as fast as we can, to serve corporations
and governments and bankers, that future generations might drive in
flying cars and robots will clean up our mess and no one will work
and everyone will have a clean shelter, healthy food and water and
platinum health care? I could probably start getting paid for this. I
hope everyone otherwise sent a comment. (Who are the Waterbearers,
again?)
UPS guy and gal just showed up.
Dropping off something for work, that didn't NEED to get dropped off
today.
I should work tomorrow. But I don't
NEED to work tomorrow. Granted, I have to pay the same amount of
debt, no matter how much I work, how much I make this month. Though
most of my Internet activity could be classified as work, except the
owners of money would not say so, the drivers of THIS economy.
But then, I'd be fine if all debt were
wiped out tomorrow, and usury be declared punishable by death. LOL
Which I know I'm in the tiny minority
about. But I'm pretty sure the vast majority are going to come around
to that way of thinking ;) (amnesty for all the current practitioners, of course.)
Quick Addendum: Budget Deal this quick means QE taper
William -
ReplyDeleteYour post over at SUN made my old heart hurt for the possibility, just like it did 'way back in the early 70's when my personal 'back to the land' movement collapsed - you write so very well.
No comment from me last time 'cause, well, what is there that one can say?
Martin,
ReplyDeleteThank you.
It doesn't bother so much, if people don't comment on that blog. It bothers me more, if people don't go to that State of Minnesota website, to say what they think about water, and about future generations.
WHD
William, I thought I'd share this email from my stepfather I received on Sunday... Kinda fits the beginning of your post...
ReplyDeleteI see the weather on the penn turnpike and see all the cars in
a 50 60 car pile up. People just could'nt stay off the roads.
And where are they going? Can't they miss a day from work?
Better to bang up the family car or brutalize yourself for pittance.
I have arived at the conclusion that nothing is worth what you pay for it.
More especially if it calls your safety in to question. I think it's a shame
that I have to get to be 82 yrs old to say,"F It" Im' going back to bed.
Tomorrow I'll be just fine and so will my vehicle.
I don't want to hear you were in an accident either. Perhaps I can lend you my head for a day. You can use it to a better advantage that I ever have I betcha.
Cold here too. All the way down to 50 today. I despise cold weather.
Your Mom is good. Today I hugged her twice'Once for me and once for you.
Be careful Steve,
DJ
Steveo (or DJ),
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear your father in law has some sense. Good to hear, he takes care of your mother. No accident on this end. Thanks for reading and thanks for checking in!
WHD