Content of Character in
a World Gone off the Rails!
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
©
May 10, 2015
Talents
are best nurtured in solitude; character is best formed in the stormy billows
of the world.
Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), German poet, dramatist, philosopher
A
READER WRITES:
Just
about makes one cry, doesn’t it?
You
are writing about business management. I
am up against the same kind of thing in political management. (Well, they don’t
call it that, but it boils down to pretty much the same thing.)
My
country, Canada, has now for years been deeply involved in Senate
scandals. After pretty well all of my
life having given politicians and politics hardly a sideways glance, I began
looking into our Senate.
I
found that right here in the 21st century we are saddled with a 19th century
institution. Why could that situation endure so long? Because Senators’
positions, pensions, prestige and perks are all protected by our
Constitution. No competition here!
We
have when all seats are filled some 105 Senators who all just about have the
same mindset. And with all thinking
along similar tracks, one might ask: why 105? One would suffice. The other 104
could simply be office staff.
Well,
I could go on on this subject, but no need for that because I already did in my
essay about the Senate, http://fleabyte.org/My-2-cents/senate.html
I
know you are too busy to read it, but if you were to do so, you are likely to
find you are on familiar territory.
Few
Senators and Members of Parliament have responded in such terms as “Thank you
for your valued contribution.”
Most
recently our Minister of Democratic Reform did, more likely a staffer, devoted
part of a sentence to “valuing” what I wrote and the rest of a two-page letter
about how committed his government is to reforming the Senate.
They
had introduced eight bills to that effect, the last one shot down by our
Supreme Court. I had to tell the
minister that it must have been very disappointing to have done so much work
and it all having gone down the drain.
Why
not simply read my essay instead of ‘valuing’ it? All the kinds of problems our
government encountered can easily be side-stepped. Problem is: our Senators, MPs and ministers,
even though they are much smarter than I am, come out of similar moulds,
19th-century-way-of-doing-things-in-politics-moulds.
Always
reacting instead of proacting. And none
daring to step out of line, sorry, “going against the grain.” After all, it would be so much easier to call
me a crackpot.
Well,
I am inviting the lot to find any error of fact or of logic in my essay. After all, there must be some. But I doubt they are capable of finding any.
But
what is the use of crying?
Henry
DR.
FISHER RESPONDS
Dear
Henry,
Yes,
it could make you cry, and as you say, there is no point in doing so. When push comes to shove, we can only nourish,
protect and sustain our own individual character. We cannot save the world when it has left the
tracks. The world improves one person at
a time.
That
said your thoughtful response is much appreciated. It is also a bit overwhelming in its scope
and problematic concerns.
It
has been my experience that lengthy detail is beyond the pale of most audiences,
even those especially privy to such detail.
You reference Gustave le Bon and Karen Armstrong, and the French
Revolution. These writers and this event
are, indeed, relevant to today.
While
you weave your concerns around such comments, people in government differ little
I suspect with people in general. People have the attention span of a gnat. Even when comments from a knowledgeable, concerned citizen resonate, I suspect they will be judged on the basis of costs/benefits
to those in power, which means they are likely to be dismissed, ignored, or dispatched.
TOO
MUCH TOO MANY TOO SOON!
I
am the last man who should say too much given I go on and on only too frequently,
but my sense is that your salient argument is buried in the detail.
Three
things I’ve learned about technocrats in the complex organization:
(1) They are tacticians not strategist,
programmed to focus on the part, never the whole. They fail to acknowledge much less see the
forest for the trees;
(2) They are pleasers not challengers to
authority or the status quo. They
interpret what those in charge think and fear and are at the ready to sustain
those interests or appease or neutralize those forebodings;
(3) They are apologists for the brand
and for people who carry the flag of the brand.
But
before I continue, allow me a bit of a chuckle.
What
you encountered with the “valuing” comment for your effort from the Canadian
government’s foil is par for the course.
We
who live in the world of ideas should note song writers Bob Dylan’s approach to
influencing those asleep at the wheel. How does he do it?
He
writes serious stuff in throwaway lyrics but with cogent hooks buried in the
songs. He has been doing this for fifty
years. His repertoire is so impressive that
Simon & Schuster has published these lyrics in a book of 963 pages at an
asking price of $299 (The Lyrics, Bob Dylan,
2015).
The
irony is that his fans repeat his lyrics unaware that these lyrics have in turn
changed their lives. Dylan is a
philosopher without protocol, a change agent without a political platform, a
cultural anomaly in a time with nobody in charge.
* *
*
The
words of a writer seldom register. It is
the code that does.
The
code dances with the mischief already in the reader’s (or listener’s) head, but
never with the overarching message the writer is endeavoring to
communicate.
Dylan
knows this, and is comfortable with it.
He is dealing with his angst and if others can identify with his
torment that is their problem, not his. He is so well centered that if they place him on a pedestal it means nothing. It
is not about him; it is about them.
If only those of us who write seriously
could understand this, what a difference it would make!
Words
and ideas rush out of our heads like volcanic ash, hot and heavy, consume
our emotions, peak, then descend and ultimately cool to become the germinating soil
of ideas for the next generation, or one in the distant future.
That is why what you say is important, perhaps not today, but tomorrow.
That is why what you say is important, perhaps not today, but tomorrow.
I’ve
paid dearly for getting all the extant published works of Gustav Le Bon (1841-1931),
some only left in fragments, as publishers didn’t see fit to preserve his
rambling but yet lucid ideas intact on such subjects a mass movements, the psychology of
peoples and the popular mind.
Within
these reference codes, people respond to cues not unlike our beloved pet or
circus animals. This was the appeal of
the “One Minute Manager” (1982).
Writer
Catherine Tritsch observed that the formula was precisely what Sea World used
in training Shamu, the killer whale: “Shamu may be better trained than most
U.S. workers.” (Successful Meetings, August
1983).
Sometimes
I think we couldn’t survive as a society if not for being on automatic pilot most of
the time.
That
said your reference to the Canadian government’s fixation with the nineteenth
century registered with me.
This
is an indicator of a wider issue, the obsession with what is already known. I call it plunging into the future looking
through the rearview mirror, always surprised when we run into clearly visible
objects up ahead.
Obviously,
there are people in positions of influence who agree with your premise(s), but
agreeing and putting that agreement into action are worlds apart.
When
in command and control roles, those in charge constantly run into themselves, then throw
their minions into the fray to play apologists for them. It would surprise me if this weren’t happening
in the Canadian government, as it is happening everywhere else. It is the minions who tell us they “value”
our efforts, when clearly they don’t.
PBS
TELEVISION’S “WOLF HALL”
In
recent weeks, I have been watching the Public Broadcasting System’s (PBS)
television series “Wolf Hall,” which
deals with the Court of King Henry VIII of England in the sixteenth century.
Change the costumes and it could be a twenty-first century drama without changing the dialogue.
Change the costumes and it could be a twenty-first century drama without changing the dialogue.
Thomas
Cromwell is the king’s right hand man playing very much the role of an (OD)
psychologist commanding all that he surveys while being obsequious to a fault
to his master, the king. Why this reference?
The
Twilight Zone was
a television series created by Rod Serling, who constantly ran into the censors
in the 1960s. These were the paranoid years in America of the “Red Scare” (i.e., communism), when first amendment rights were summarily
violated by the US Government, while the Supreme Court went along with the charade. I was a big fan of this program during this most hysterical period.
Serling
got around these restrictions and got his message across by placing his dramas in
the “twilight zone” without sacrificing the content or his character.
I see “Wolf Hall” applying the same strategy. Who could object to what happened five hundred years ago, right?
I see “Wolf Hall” applying the same strategy. Who could object to what happened five hundred years ago, right?
Alas,
the more things go around they come
around, as the French remind us.
So, it is today with your Canadian government, as it is seemingly immersed in the equivalent of the oligarchic “Court of King Henry VIII.”
Ideologies differ but people don’t.
So, it is today with your Canadian government, as it is seemingly immersed in the equivalent of the oligarchic “Court of King Henry VIII.”
Ideologies differ but people don’t.
Your
considerate essay reminds me of our oligarchic Western World of which your Canadian
government is but a bland prototype to our own.
By
a curious coincidence, “Wolf Hall” as it is now unfolding on television would not have had much appeal to the boomer, hippie or “X” generations, but a
mock appeal to the Millenials. Why?
Millennials cue on the things they understand and in a code that resonates with them. They understand that the oligarchic one percent own and control everything and then there is the rest of us, yet we do nothing. There are protests but no revolution (Le Bon also wrote on this).
Millennials cue on the things they understand and in a code that resonates with them. They understand that the oligarchic one percent own and control everything and then there is the rest of us, yet we do nothing. There are protests but no revolution (Le Bon also wrote on this).
Occupy
Wall Street (OWS) was such a protest movement that began on September 17, 2011, in Zuccotti
Park in New York City's Wall Street financial district. It received global attention and spawned the
Occupy movement against social and economic inequality worldwide, but it has
mainly fizzled because of a lack of coordinated leadership and support.
Millennials learned in watching this that it is the difference between smoke and fire.
THE
GENESIS OF OLIGARCHIC AUTHORITY
Since
WWII, the management class has become the most viable contingent of a self-appointed
elite. Managers are employees like
workers but from the beginning have acted as if owners, which created an aspiring
propensity for climbing up the hierarchy.
Let us call them “pyramid climbers.” You have encountered an aspiring one with your “valuing” response.
Let us call them “pyramid climbers.” You have encountered an aspiring one with your “valuing” response.
The
boomer generation as climbers were always vying for the next job, not having time
to do the job paid to do. Unabashed
sycophants to power, be it corrupt or otherwise, they longed only for the next rung
on the pyramid. I worked for a few
perhaps you have as well.
Millennials
are the latest common denominator in this sequential development, only they are
not interested in pyramids or climbing.
Quite frankly, they are not interested in a lot. Either they have seen the damage second hand,
or they have been born into a family with the baggage, and are looking for a
way out not knowing for sure what that might be.
They
are content to be currently drifting certain they don’t want the world of their
parents. They don't see the situation as a matter of blood but more a matter of the
content of their character.
With
no power, or no drive to attain power, they may be the greatest danger of all to
oligarchic authority because the oligarchs have no idea how to spin this
generation. Back to “Wolf Hall.”
Thomas
Cromwell, the blacksmith’s son, was a Millennial of his time, while the Royal Court
that King Henry VIII made peripheral to power, did their pyramid climbing building
sand castles in the air. Pyramid
climbers today are returning to this fate of differentiation if you prefer.
Cromwell’s
virtues were competence and cunning; those of the Royal Court were blood and
privilege. His involved hard work,
self-discipline, domestic responsibility, kindness within limits, perspicacity
to a fault, and stability above all else, avoiding being caught up in the intrigue.
The
Royal Court relished its position power, perks, privileges and inheritance not
unlike “pyramid climbers” today.
Just
as management symbolically disdained the working population with its designated parking, isolated offices, bonuses, executive
concessions, Cromwell's OD astutely wreaked of “middle class,” or nineteenth
century code, “bourgeois orthodoxy.”
Oligarchic
authority and bourgeois orthodoxy go in sync apparently in Canadian government,
as they do in the United States government and corporate society. WWII nostalgia will just not dissipate.
The
content of character virtues have dissipated as has middle class values (see The Worker, Alone!). They have been dismissed as boring lacking in
the chutzpah of upward mobility and progress being instead identified with playing
it “safe,” as if that were a sin.
We
have moved beyond pyramid climbers to entrepreneurs, but is that the answer to the climber’s legacy for it seems to hang on and not leave our minds.
But,
Henry, we are not safe anymore.
We are not in control. We generate chaos and call it business as usual practices. Governance in the public and private sector operates with infallible authority denying that everything we have (and are) can be whipped away from us at any moment.
We are not in control. We generate chaos and call it business as usual practices. Governance in the public and private sector operates with infallible authority denying that everything we have (and are) can be whipped away from us at any moment.
We
are not at the pleasure of bullies and terrorists; we are at the pleasure of
our protectors.
The
West is frozen in Vladimir Putin’s headlights unable to get out of the way much
less move to safety. He understands our
terror and exploits it at will.
Pusillanimity pretty well covers it.
Pusillanimity pretty well covers it.
The
terror that grips us in the West is not our weakness but our extraordinary
strength.
We
have lost our ability to look out the window and see “what is,” but instead
look in the mirror and see only our terror.
Millennials
seem to understand this without knowing.
Perhaps this is because they refuse our conditioning. Perhaps they have endured abusive parents, absent parents, self-indulgent parents, immature parents, hypocritical parents, parents chasing the buck while fleeing their mortality, parents looking for connections, always connections, for an easy score, always an easy score, and they want none of it.
Perhaps this is because they refuse our conditioning. Perhaps they have endured abusive parents, absent parents, self-indulgent parents, immature parents, hypocritical parents, parents chasing the buck while fleeing their mortality, parents looking for connections, always connections, for an easy score, always an easy score, and they want none of it.
It
would seem we have progressed as a society in a mad dash away from parenting since WWII. This retreat has been continuous from the
Hippie Generation to the “Me” Generation to the “X” Generation, stopping with Millennials.
Is
it any wonder Millennials are not interested in authority – they ignore it; not
interested in culture – don't see the point of it; don’t feel victimized – don’t have time for it; and are not religious or irreligious – don’t feel the need?
We
are back to the “self-made” man (or woman) mold solely reliant on ourselves, tired
of the rhetoric of parents, false promises of bosses and politicians and others
who don’t have a scintilla of understanding of us.
But
this “follow your dream” meritocracy that is implicit in this retreat can only
go so far as explanation. It always
comes down to doing something, now!
There
is little chance that those in command
& control positions, as one observer put it, are ready “to loosen the screws even
one turn.” We have to do it for them.
The
West is crumbling from the inside because it continues to stay the same, can’t
seem to face the changes, which means it leaves the future up for grabs. A Putin type was bound to step into the
breach.
We
desperately need a socioeconomic Middle Class as the oligarchs once again come
to bully Western society. I am betting
on the Millennials.
* *
*
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