Why Anti-Authoritarians are Diagnosed as Mentally Ill | Mad In America
february 2012 by randombit
Americans have been increasingly socialized to equate inattention, anger, anxiety, and immobilizing despair with a medical condition, and to seek medical treatment rather than political remedies. What better way to maintain the status quo than to view inattention, anger, anxiety, and depression as biochemical problems of those who are mentally ill rather than normal reactions to an increasingly authoritarian society.
society
february 2012 by randombit
ClubOrlov: The Sermon to the Sharks
june 2011 by randombit
Books that attempt to look honestly at our contemporary condition often run amok when they attempt to show “the way forward.” What we ought to do is form political coalitions that lock out veto groups, curb the power of corporations, revise the tax code, bring back financial regulations from the 1950s and... so on. This would require reform. However, any reform of a complex system, such as our existing one, involves further investment in social complexity through a wide variety of costly initiatives. And here's the problem: there is no longer either the money or the energy for such initiatives. The default is to just let it collapse, but such an outlook, perfectly reasonable though it is, is generally not regarded as optimistic enough by the people who publish books (New Society Publishers is an exception). Some time ago (during the sustainability movement of the 1970s, which were Greer's formative time) optimistic, reform-minded expositions seemed useful; now they are starting to seem like compulsive anxiety coping behaviors: knock three times on wood, throw a pinch of salt over the left shoulder, mention sustainability and renewables.
orlov
society
politics
future
apocolypse
june 2011 by randombit
Caring for Your Introvert - The Atlantic (March 2003)
october 2009 by randombit
Extroverts have little or no grasp of introversion. They assume that company, especially their own, is always welcome. They cannot imagine why someone would need to be alone; indeed, they often take umbrage at the suggestion. As often as I have tried to explain the matter to extroverts, I have never sensed that any of them really understood. They listen for a moment and then go back to barking and yipping.
psychology
article
personality
society
culture
october 2009 by randombit
Maisonneuve Blog | Iranian Protests Are Not Just an Excuse to Talk About Twitter
june 2009 by randombit
And to the trying-too-hard-it’s-painful folks at Twitter: this is not a chance to turn your ridiculous “service” into the saviour of democracy. When you start delaying maintenance in order to help protests that don’t happen to coincide perfectly with US foreign policy interests, then we’ll tweet—er, talk.
politics
society
twitter
psyops
june 2009 by randombit
"The Shallowest Generation" by James Quinn. FSO Editorial 11/03/2008
december 2008 by randombit
Optimists like to point out that Europe and Japan have much worse unfunded liability problems than the U.S. That is like taking pride in being the best looking horse at the glue factory. In the end, we’ll all still be glue.
politics
finance
culture
society
demographics
december 2008 by randombit
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