
The Big Lie: Why America is all about Control and Conformity, not Truth or Freedom
http://www.happierabroad.com/ebook/Page31b.htm
No one, other than yourself, chooses your own lifestyle.Winston wrote:1) You live to work, are a workaholic, and tie your identity to your job, organization and culture. "You are what you do" in other words. And you have no identity outside of that. You are a happy slave who is glad to give your life to the economy in corporate servitude. This gives you purpose and contentment. It is what you strive and live for. After all, everyone is striving for that, so you'd better too!
2) You consume endless junk with your hard earned money, junk that you don't need which advertisers sell you, in order to fill the emptiness within you, and enjoy your life, while helping out your economy at the same time. So, you seek your pleasure in consumerism, both for your benefit and in your patriotic duty to help the US economy. Consumption is your key to happiness, not a healthy sense of self, spirituality or social connection.
Are you talking about these essays here?gsjackson wrote:Since you write in the tradition of Alexis de Tocqueville, Winston, at some point you should read Democracy in America, which is still, 175 years later, the most insightful book ever written about the U.S. Also worthwhile is Tocqueville in America by Pierson, which is a compilation of Tocq's letters home to France while he traveled around the U.S.
Tocqueville anticipated a lot of your points, and specifically noted the irony that there is less real freedom of speech here than in other countries because majority opinion functions as such a strict censor. Many, many other points relevant to the social pathologies discussed on this website. All the social critics writing in the 1950s-1970s, talking about a "culture of narcissism," a culture of conformity, and such, understood themselves to be explicating Tocqueville's views.
Most of the essays relevant to your themes are in volume 2, section 2. In addition to conformity, suppression of thought and free speech, he talks about how American individualism could well turn into an odious "egoism," once Americans lose the capacity to determine "self interest rightly understood" (meaning the ability to see one's own self interest bound together with the interests of others). His thoughts on the American political system don't hold up so well, as the U.S. has since turned into a completely corrupt oligarchy, with public policy sold to the highest bidder at every level of government.Winston wrote:Are you talking about these essays here?gsjackson wrote:Since you write in the tradition of Alexis de Tocqueville, Winston, at some point you should read Democracy in America, which is still, 175 years later, the most insightful book ever written about the U.S. Also worthwhile is Tocqueville in America by Pierson, which is a compilation of Tocq's letters home to France while he traveled around the U.S.
Tocqueville anticipated a lot of your points, and specifically noted the irony that there is less real freedom of speech here than in other countries because majority opinion functions as such a strict censor. Many, many other points relevant to the social pathologies discussed on this website. All the social critics writing in the 1950s-1970s, talking about a "culture of narcissism," a culture of conformity, and such, understood themselves to be explicating Tocqueville's views.
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/DETOC/toc_indx.html
If so, I don't see how they are like mine. They seem different. He even seems to imply that he believes that there is democracy in America, when technically there never was democracy, not even from the beginning. The word "democracy" does not appear in the Declaration of Independence even. America was set up as a Republic. The Founding Fathers did not even believe in it.
See my other essay about that here:
http://www.happierabroad.com/ebook/Page31a.htm
So what is Tocqueville talking about?
Very well put miss conduct. I love the architecture of European countries as well. I show the comparison you talk about on this page. Have you seen it?miss_conduct wrote:A+ post. All Americans are about is "keeping up with the Joneses"....
Look around you...cookie cutter houses that looked stamped out of a rubber stamp....
Look all over Europe or the Soviet Union: towering, majestic cathedrals, magnificent buildings, historic landmarks....
Look at America: Wal Mart, McDonalds, check cashing places, shopping malls.
Europe and the rest of the world: Pagodas, onion dome cathedrals, castles, breathtaking scenery.
I have spoken. Hope everyone is having a great day!
He is entitled to his bitter opinions, just as a popular college jock laying American hotties at school every weekend is entitled to his happy ones.Nate wrote:However, the uniformity you describe is not nearly as monolithic as you portray. You paint the whole USA as seen through the lense of your own bitter experiences. It is hardly so simple and your essay is very simplistic.
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Whatever you are posing as "Happier Abroad", what comes through is bitter discontent.
I think you have a lot of issues challenging you, and stand as living proof that just moving your
location will not fix them.