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RE: E-commerce and the Broken American Dream

in Silver Bloggers5 days ago

I don't know if there was a specific point at which it happened but it seems like we somehow measure everything in terms of dollars, including our sense of self. We even measure happiness in terms of dollars. And it seems that we have created a system that if you somehow prefer less and a simpler life, you are regarded as some kind of social pariah. Like it is almost Un-American to not spend every cent you have on goods and services.

Zoning laws are crazy in most places. I was having a somewhat lengthy discussion with one of my cousins in Denmark — he actually lived in the US for 3 years — any pointed out that through his lens of perception as a foreigners, zoning in the US seemed exclusively designed to maximize profits rather than to optimize housing people. I can't say us how I disagree with that assessment.

We have since given up on finding a smaller place not for price reasons but for simple availability reasons. There's just nothing going, and on the rare occasions that there is it's usually snapped up by some Private Equity Firm as a knockdown to rebuilt as a luxury property.

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A lot of zoning laws seem to be tied to gentrification, racial discrimination, and early 20th century progressive goals of eliminating "slums" and "blighted neighborhoods" without considering what it would cost to house the now-displaced minorities, or else no real concern for them. The left and right alike were often openly racist toward Jews, blacks, and poor European immigrants like the Irish. "Modernization" often meant destroying their growing communities.

Without looking at the political side of it, the *sociological" side seems to suggest that we have created a very "ME focused" society. Nobody considers the impact entirely ME actions has on others, on the community, or on the surrounding community/environment. "Rational self-interest" is fine, but obsessive self-involvement can be very destructive...

Rational self-interest requires recognizing the boundaries of others and respecting them in order to receive reciprocal respect. Reciprocal universal principles are the foundation for real morality, necessary, albeit insufficient on their own.

People who claim altruistic motives, especially in politics, usually trike me as hiding their greed and libido dominandi behind a veneer of "concern for the community." The proof is in their use of coercion. It is an asymmetric, non-reciprocal relationship of usurped authority.

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