Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
It's
been forty years since I graduated from high school, and I've spent
most of that forty years in the business world. Now I'm about to retire
and I'm thinking back on what I've learned that will be useful as I
begin my nine
intentional practices that I
hope will really make a difference in the world.
I think the most important thing I've learned is captured in Charles Barsotti's
cartoon above: Nobody knows anything.
Because of our horrific
overpopulation and exhaustion of our planet and its resources, we have
entered into a period of chronic, massive, global stress, and it's made
us all crazy, like rats in a lab fighting over the last few scraps of
food. We've stopped listening to ourselves and started looking for
saviours -- 'leaders' and 'experts' to show us and tell us what to do.
The so-called 'leaders' and 'experts' I've met are mostly very
intelligent people, but they haven't a clue. They're buoyed by their
own press and by sycophants fighting their way up from the
bottom or desperate to believe that someone
is in charge, in control, and knows what needs to be done. These
'leaders' hang out with other people just like themselves, and their
groupthink persuades them that they're right, they're important, that
what they say and do and decide really matters.
But it's all fraud, papered with self-delusion,
self-aggrandization and hubris. What gets done in large organizations
(corporations, non-profits, governments) is the sum of what everyone in
those organizations does. The people at the top generally have no more
real impact, and no more useful knowledge with which to make decisions,
than the people at the bottom. The 'leaders' are responsible neither
for the organization's successes, nor its failures -- a few people just
don't make that much difference, except when they make some hugely
expensive, incompetent decision or rip the company off so it goes
bankrupt.
Almost all mergers and acquisitions actually destroy value -- their
only real purpose is to eliminate competition. The "competitive
advantage" and "economies of scale" that big organizations lay claim to
are a fiction. Their success is really mostly due to massive, incessant
propaganda aimed at dumbed-down customers, subsidies, discounts and
favours bought with political donations, the crushing of competition
and innovation through legal intimidation and offshoring, cornering and
squandering precious natural resources and treating the natural
environment as a free dumping ground.
Economists, financial 'experts', psychologists, consultants, pundits,
celebrities, policy wonks, advisors, barons of industry, doctors --
none of these people really know what they're doing. They want you to believe
they know what they're doing, so that they can justify what they're
taking out of the system in salaries, bonuses, perks, commissions and
fees. But they're making it up as they go along. They have come to
expect bailouts when they fail financially, and indemnity from
prosecution when they screw up, or get caught breaking the law. And
they get away with it.
It's all veneer.
Beneath each $2000 suit, behind all the swagger, from the boardroom to
the office of the commander in chief, there's an insecure, terrified
little boy pretending to be in charge, faking it, and easily swept away
by the first pretty young adoring intern who will go down on her knees
before him.
We would be much better off looking to the crowds for wisdom. The
collective knowledge of employees, customers, community
members, while far from perfect knowledge for decision-making,
would at least be better than the staggering ignorance of megalomanic
'leaders' making decisions in their echo chambers and information
vacuums.
No
one is in control. Obama
isn't getting anything done, despite being the most powerful person on
the planet, because he can't.
The 'leaders' aren't going to deal with climate change or peak oil or
pandemic disease or unsustainable debts, because no one has the power
or authority to do anything, and because it would be political suicide
to admit that the only solutions that might work will be radical,
painful, and require a lot of sacrifice from everyone. So all you get
is posturing, and it's just going to get worse.
This is what unsustainable
means.
We have destroyed this planet for future generations and for
all-life-on-Earth, and the worst culprits are still doing it, while we
sit around stupidly watching them, wondering what to do, waiting for
someone, anyone, to save us from us.
We need to stop listening to these know-nothing, cowardly 'leaders'. We
need to stop paying them. We need to stop working for them. We need to
stop investing in them. We need to stop trusting them, and stop
believing the nonsense they are telling us. We need to stop voting for
them, and paying taxes to finance their backroom deals. We need to stop
buying overpriced crap from their fat, mismanaged organizations. We
need to send some of them to jail for criminal fraud and the rest out
to pasture, and take back our society, our economy, our Earth
from these thieves, these self-deluded con men. No more leaders.
We could start, one community at a time, to know, again, what it means
to live responsibly, meaningfully, modestly, sufficiently, sustainably.
But we will not. We have become disconnected from all-life-on-Earth,
and forgotten the simple knowledge of how to live as part of it. And
we're too busy to think about what that means for our grim
future, as
the dark and gathering sameness of the world
rolls over us, like an impenetrable fog.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I've met f2f]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs