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REBEL WITH A CAUSE

Success should not be about excess. Boycott this tendency.  

We should resist the urge to watch the not-so-reality tv shows.

We should not be interested in Kim Kardashian’ s 20+carat diamond enbagement ring.

We should not indulge criminals with media attention and infamy.

Stop being a sheeple and feeding the beast!

“The materialistic and selfish quality of contemporary life is not inherent in the human condition,” Judt writes. Much of what appears “natural” today dates from the 1980s: the obsession with wealth creation, the cult of privatization and the private sector, the growing disparities between rich and poor.

“It’s about not forgetting the past. About having the courage to look at the present and see its faults without walking away in disgust or skepticism. … I do think we’re on the edge of a terrifying world, and that many young people know that but don’t know how to talk about it.”

–Tony Judt from “Ill Fares the Land”

Looks like some light bulbs are beginning to go on out there! The world does need to change people and if we need an Apocalypse to make that happen, then so be it, but we the people can change the status quo.

I read the below article on the NPR site. The comments for this article are good too, but I have not figured out yet how to post the link here yet, so you will have to copy and paste in into your browser.  http://www.npr.org/2011/05/21/136462824/a-psychopath-walks-into-a-room-can-you-tell

“Some psychologists have a theory that many of the world’s ills can be blamed on psychopaths in high places.”

“Robert Hare, the eminent Canadian psychologist who invented the psychopath checklist, … recently announced that you’re four times more likely to find a psychopath at the top of the corporate ladder than you are walking around in the janitor’s office,” journalist Jon Ronson tells Guy Raz, host of weekends on All Things Considered.

Ronson is the author of a new book, The Psychopath Test: A Journey Through the Madness Industry. The titular test is called the PCL-R. Invented by Hare, it’s a checklist of characteristics common to psychopaths: things like glib and superficial charm, grandiosity, manipulative behavior and lack of remorse.

Picture a psychopath and you might think of Norman Bates. But Ronson says successful businessmen can also score high on the checklist. While researching his book, Ronson visited the Florida home of Al Dunlap — known as “Chainsaw Al” — who as CEO of appliance maker Sunbeam was notorious for his gleeful fondness for firing people and shutting down factories.

“So I turned up at his house, and it was full of sculptures of predatory animals,” Ronson says. “And he immediately started to talk about how he believed in the predatory spirit, which was word for word what Bob Hare writes about in the checklist: Look out for their belief in the predatory spirit.”

But Dunlap managed to turn the psychopath test on its head, Ronson says.

“He admitted to many, many items on the checklist, but redefined them as leadership positives,” he says. “So ‘manipulation’ was another way of saying ‘leadership.’ ‘Grandiose sense of self worth’ — which would have been a hard one for him to deny because he was standing underneath a giant oil painting of himself — was, you know, ‘You’ve got to like yourself if you’re going to be a success.’”

Ultimately, Ronson says, spending two years hunting for psychopaths took a toll on him.

“I have great admiration for the Hare checklist. I think it’s right. I think it’s as scientific as psychology can ever be,” he says. But learning to administer it “really can mess with your head.”

The Psychopath Test: A Journey Through the Madness Industry
By Jon Ronson
Hardcover, 288 pages
Riverhead Hardcover
List Price: $25.95

Imagine our world after an Apocalypse. What could the next age be like?

Sure it is unthinkable, but we must be prepared just in case. With all the prophecy talk and a tendency with humans for self-fulfillment, I think we must consider the possibilities of a Post-Apocalyptic world. As awful and horrible as it may be during the maelstrom, the aftermath could be wonderful, like a fresh canvas, a clean slate–an opportunity for the humans who survive it (I am optimistic) – to live wiser and easier as humans from Earth. I’m not talking about a Utopian society, which I believe is not inherently possible given that Nature is always in flux, but I imagine a New Renaissance where our children and grandchildren evolve to manage a better Earth where:

  • humans are more tolerant, empathetic and sympathetic.
  • we are less parasitic, more sustainable, and more attuned with the environment.
  • daily life has less stress, less rat race tactics, less posturing, less xenophobia.
  • greed is tempered and success is not measured by excess.
  • creativity and art are as equally important as conformity and technology.
  • science and religion can be viewed as equally miraculous results of Nature and coexist without the extreme fundamentalism.
  • better understanding and balance of the extremes within societies and cultures of the Earth.

All doomsaying aside —there is no reason to need an apocalypse to achieve a better and more balanced world. So I think the conversation should be ongoing for creating that change and I intend to promote those ideas with this blog.

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