Friday, February 29, 2008

1 in 100 Americans Jailed

The Associated Press ran this story yesterday:

NEW YORK - For the first time in U.S. history, more than one of every 100 adults is in jail or prison, according to a new report documenting America’s rank as the world’s No. 1 incarcerator. It urges states to curtail corrections spending by placing fewer low-risk offenders behind bars.

Using state-by-state data, the report says 2,319,258 Americans were in jail or prison at the start of 2008 — one out of every 99.1 adults. Whether per capita or in raw numbers, it’s more than any other nation.

The report, released Thursday by the Pew Center on the States, said the 50 states spent more than $49 billion on corrections last year, up from less than $11 billion 20 years earlier. The rate of increase for prison costs was six times greater than for higher education spending, the report said.

Read On...
As America continues its Authoritarian slide, one can't help but wonder, how did we get here? In response, I humbly offer up a newsflash of my own: Lack of education/job opportunities + impoverished living conditions = crime.

Monday, February 25, 2008

A Leopard is Not Defined by Her Spots

While breaking for lunch, I decided to see if there was anything worth watching on the tube. Surfing the channels in aimless avoidance of commercials, (I expect usually to find nothing), and by then my meal is finished. This time was different though. I happened across an oddly unique nature documentary that featured a lioness mothering an infant deer of some sort. It seems the lioness had lost her pride to catastrophic circumstance, and as sole survivor had undergone some degree of post traumatic stress, which it was believed contributed to her adopting the baby deer.

For days, and then weeks, researchers followed them. As time wore on, the lioness grew thinner, and the film crew was certain she would soon eat the baby deer. She did not. In fact, she did not feed herself for nearly a month, and it was only after the baby deer had died that she showed any interest in tending to her own needs. According to the researchers, over the course of the next year, she adopted five more deer.

What fascinates me is that this type of behavior on the part of the lion flies in the face of conventional wisdom. "Animals" are dumb, right? They don't experience love, and they certainly don't understand the concept of putting other individuals first. I mean, come on, they're "animals." Incapable of generating any thoughts beyond the primal... right?

Thursday, February 14, 2008

The Urban Experience Is Less Than "Urbane"

Pardon the lull folks, but the studying has been thick. Having trouble completing an assignment actually.

Using Bernstein's West Side Story, Crane's Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, & An Experiment In Misery, Melville's Bartelby the Scrivener, and Orwell's Down and Out in Paris and London... I'm being asked to construct an argument in favor of what it is about street life that is so "cool." Which of course most of us would have no problem doing. Only, these sources are wretched. With the exception of West Side Story, they all depict city-life as a rotten struggle. Needless to say my creative juices are spent, and my dissonance is through the roof. Every approach I have taken smacks of falsehood because to truly engage these texts, one cannot conclude that there is anything "cool" about urban living, within the realist context that these artists explore it.

If you are familiar with any of these works, let's chat, I'm in dire need of outside perspectives.

Thursday, February 07, 2008

Affluenza

There is a sickness on the loose, and it is spreading across the whole of Westernized society. Unlike other pathogens, this one infects virtually everyone, and once you’ve got it, you can go your entire life without knowing you had it. I am speaking of Affluenza "the disease of consumerism." Since mid-twentieth century, Affluenza has spread like wildfire throughout the Western world, leaving nothing in its wake but empty, lonely, unhappy people. In the United States, and elsewhere; there is this belief held by many (and validated through their actions) that life is just one big shopping spree. Fueled by thoughts of “I want,” “I need,” and “enough is never enough,” people are filling their lives at an alarming rate with “things” and then claiming later that their existence feels empty. It’s part of living in a consumerist culture. Prompted to “buy now - pay later” we are fast becoming a materialistic, greedy, and self-absorbed culture.

To put this into perspective; in 1958 only 4% of American households had dishwashers. That percentage has since increased to 50%. Similarly, in 1958 only 1% of the population had a television set, and that has risen to an astounding 97%. We fly 25 times more often than we used to just 30 years ago, and there are some of us who fly just to shop! Shopping malls have become the center of the community, and there are currently more malls in the U.S. than high schools. Studies have revealed that 70% of the American populous visits a shopping center at least once a week, and spends a weekly average of 6 hours shopping. This is due in part to the psychosis that we need more to feel good about ourselves.

Our entire orientation is based on comparison to others. Some theorize that because of this, we suffer feelings of inadequacy if our neighbor has the newest latest material good, and we don’t. Advertisers have keyed into this, and they prey on our misgivings of self-worth. We are bombarded with ads and commercials all designed to cause us to feel that we are not lovable without “stuff.” Especially prevalent among the youth (who on average have been witness to over 1 million commercials by the age of 20!), this is exemplified by adolescents who seek to boost their self-esteem through clothes, and ultimately are left without a sense of identity to prepare them for life as an adult, and in the end, they often perpetuate this shallow behavior for decades.

We are in constant competition with each other to have the best of the best, even when we can’t afford it. So we increase our consumption by working more and saving less, until we experience what is known as “possession overload.” Life becomes taken up, by taking care of “things” instead of people. The more we have, the more we must keep track of. Relationships suffer as we slowly become owned by our “stuff.” People become disposable. If you don’t give me pleasure, I’ll just get rid of you for someone newer, better. But those who fall victim to this treatment are not limited to people we know, or who are in our immediate circles. Volunteerism is on a huge decline, because people just don’t have the time anymore; it’s all spent working to pay off their ridiculously large debts.

It is important to point out that prior to the twentieth century; the word “consumption” had a very negative connotation. It was used to describe the act of exhausting something completely, burning out, or an ending. Yet this has been twisted in the modern age to suit the needs of a free market economy that wants you to believe that “consuming” every last dime in your pocket, in the pursuit of artificial happiness, is the meaning of life. However money and “things” will never bring us