We can refuse to participate in a dead society gone shopping.
— Joe Bageant
Once we understand what feeds it, it becomes possible to think of stopping the Machine. I puzzled over this one for a long time, only to suddenly grok the obvious: the fodder for the Machine is our precious life energy!
So then. Deny it its coveted fuel: your effort, your attention and interest, your money, your loyalty, your goodwill and your good ideas. Deny it your streams of energy, one by one. Direct them instead to the Lifeworld. And don’t shout it from the rooftops! Just blend discreetly into one of the various subcultures experimenting nowadays with a saner way of life; the minions and guardians of the Machine will never even notice you.
This is the crux. Any machine can withstand tinkering, but no machine can run without fuel. Like an old mill on a dry riverbed, it will become a relic of a past that’s done with, a useless hunk of debris. Our radical withdrawal will be the end of the Machine.
Here are some of the ways of seceding from Babylon:
- Down-work, un-work
More work is the source of evils like resource depletion and stress and pointlessly complicated lives; the Earth needs us to stop working so hard! The less we work, the less we feed the Machine. Our work aids the plunder, our de-working slows and stops it, one person at a time. This is why Babylon has always reinforced the message that work is virtuous and important even as it was inventing pointless busywork, harmful work, useless work. Let’s celebrate “Freedom from Labor” Day! Working more is not the way to leisure. Leisure is the way to leisure. Find it before the Machine uses you up and spits you out.
Working less will give the earth a break and repatriate you from ratdom back to humanity. There is plenty of work out there for those who want to do real things, useful things that matter. Once we shed debts and provide ourselves with paid-for basics, money is a small part of the picture. Well-being is what matters, not cranking out a pittance while the planet is plundered more and more. What we need is a “less work ethic”! Less work, less planet being used, more life.
- Unschool
Unschooling does not mean turning the parent into a traditional teacher, and stuffing the kids full of the same nonsense that the official curricula dictate. No! Let children learn as they did between that ages of birth and 5 or 6, when they acquired prodigious quantities of knowledge, all by their own efforts. Just help them along, and they will be far ahead of their institutionalized peers. Best learning happens in context, by learners who are busily exploring their environment. Spend time with your children sharing with them what you know and what you love. Create neighborhood co-op schools. Get tutors (elders in particular): kind, child-cherishing experts who can take the kids down paths you do not know. And make it possible for children to learn real things: basic medical care, care for animals, food growing and cooking, conversation, geography of travel, building. All those abstractions schools “teach” will either be learned in the course of their exploration, or will never be needed anyways. Honest: when was the last time you needed algebra?
- Dis-identify with the hologram
Exit the theater of the audience-nation! As Joe Bageant once ranted so well: “All Americans, regardless of caste, live in a culture woven of self-referential illusions. Like a holographic simulation, each part refers exclusively back to the whole, and the whole refers exclusively back to the parts. All else is excluded by this simulated reality, a simulated republic of eagles and big box stores, a good place to live so long as we never stray outside the hologram. The corporate simulacrum of life has penetrated us so deeply it now dominates the mind’s interior landscape with its celebrities and commercial images. Within the hologram sparkles the culture-generating industry, spinning out our unreality like cotton candy.”
The hologram and its spin meisters have been having themselves a veritable orgy of lies and propaganda dealing with the wreck that is Ukraine. This has been one part of the world I have followed with some alacrity over the last year. Nothing, nothing, nothing reported in the MSM was close to the reality on the ground. When the fated Malaysian plane was shot down, a relentless stream of deception sloshed out like long-stored toxic sludge that burst its containment. As Ilargi has recently pointed out on Automatic Earth, 2014 was the year when the bargeload of lies heading our way was no longer even disguised. It may be time for me to pull back even from the little “Babylon-watching” that I still do. Their self-referential faux-reality does not deserve the gift of anyone’s attention. My heart goes to all those trapped in Babylon’s perpetual wars, and my blessings.
- Unplug from the Spectacle
Toss the damn stupid boob box. Why are you still watching all those hundreds of channels with nothing on? It sucks away your hours like a vampire. Give those hours to something that will give you joy. After all, your supply of lifetime hours is very limited. News? You will learn about the important events from other people. It is quite possible to stop reading the papers – skimming the headlines is more than enough. And you will spare yourself the crassness of commercials, ads, infomercials and disinformation. Computer news can be used far more selectively, and can supply news directly from other people like us, unfiltered by official channels. Find what works for you. Waking from the trance takes time and new habits.
But that’s not nearly enough. I have been amongst the TV-unplugged for 15 years now, and yet I too get sucked into the vortex of disastrous news. In the fall of 2008 I gaped with horror and disbelief as the evidence of stupendous plunder unfolded. I spent inordinate amount of my time trying to fathom it. But what good has it done me or my neighbors? All those fear-mongering stories – the true and the false – are just stories, repetitive and debilitating messages of scarcity and doom, bringing about a festering sense of anxiety, failure and helplessness so that people become ripe pickings for demagogues and con-men. We can choose not to play this game. We can tell stories that are of use, and disseminate them via our own channels. And while the thugs and thieves will keep on with their business, we can and will find a way to secede from their Kingdom of Spin, leaving them to their slime, moving on.
- Un-shop
Buy only what you must. Economize. Go frugal. Share. Grow and make your own. Join a community that knows how. Support local merchants. Let the uglification of box stores mercifully fall into the understory of history. A healthy economy does not depend on buying up an avalanche of crap and working in pointless jobs to be able to afford it. It depends on people being genuinely productive and economical. It also depends on a healthy planet to feed us, and on social systems not based on theft so that we don’t have to run just to stay in one place, while others fatten themselves at our expense.
- Un-debt
Get a debit card if you must, or do a cash economy. Pay off the debts. Do what it takes. Get out of the yoke too demeaning even for oxen.
- Delegitimize
Judiciously unvote. The choices are really between really bad and “keep fingers crossed” less bad. Is that good enough? For how long? Let Babylon’s politics languish on the periphery of your attention. Ignore the inanities of the election races. Stop chasing after the liars. Refuse the system your loyalty and your goodwill.
- Break the spell of Thingness
We’ve been taught for endless generations that it is stuff that really matters. Stuff is primary. Stuff gives security and happiness. After all, we are the descendants of the Neolithic cult of MORE. But material stuff is just a fraction of what really matters here on Earth, and we already have more than enough of it. Let us return to a larger vision: humans who break their addition to material wealth for the greater good. Humans as intelligent beings who cherish– not ruin — creation, humans as those who are wise enough to enlarge the chances of Life.
- Down-specialize
Back off from single-minded pursuits and become a generalist. Every biochemist should know how to fix what breaks in the home. Every engineer should know how to start a fire. Every office worker should know how to do basic healing. Every one of us should know how to grow food. We all together hold the potential to be able to do most anything that really matters and our local communities require. Let’s look at the priorities, and put specialization in its valuable, but much smaller place.
- Undomesticate
Domestication, like slavery, rebounds on the perpetrator. We must return to thinking of our fellow animals and plants as symbionts, and more, as devoted friends. Some of these friends feed us; they give the gift of their lives so that we may live on. Others maintain the atmosphere, the ecosphere, the soil. Why don’t we treat them accordingly? In return, we will reap a restoration of our own wild spirit now crushed under the weight of misery-spreading dependency, under the burden of everyday brutality that exists because of our own complicity. Babylon sweeps it under the rug, and then abuses the rebels who refuse to look the other way.
Dare I say it? Let’s rewild!
- Repudiate usury
Babylon would like us to forget that usury, historically and biblically speaking, did not mean charging high interest. It meant not charging interest at all. Medieval economies flourished without interest. And it was interest that pushed the cancerous expansion of Western civilization. Interest is one of the most powerful ratcheting forces behind the vicious circle of “endless growth” and accompanying plunder. There are other ways to conceive of money and lending. Send some of your energy to the financial rebels who are disseminating them.
- Disencumber
Remember those storage sheds full of crap you will never use again, the closets chock-full of stuff you haven’t seen in years? Time to “shed it” for good. Most places have second-hand stores happy to take some of it. Try craigslist or freecycle websites. Some communities have Free Stores or book kiosks too, or need to. I have had good luck with half.com and amazon for passing on books that I cared about but that I would never read again. Every time something, no matter how small, is passed on to the next user, life opens up new possibilities.
- Divest
We cannot expect to shrink Babylon or leave it while giving it our money. These money systems are the dark heart of Babylon, and they are the ones that transform our living energy into the stuff that flows out. It is laughable to think that Babylon will allow significant reform so that community banking and money issuance could take hold. But thousands of hidden, small experiments growing like mushrooms everywhere? At a time of ongoing high-level crises Babylon must deal with first – that indeed would be a formidable challenge. Divesting deflated South Africa’s balloon. It will deflate Babylon’s zeppelin too. Let’s find ways to invest our money in the service of Life.
- Phase out economic dependencies
Learning to supply one’s basic needs without the dependence on Babylon is the key to freedom. Follow the paths of food to learn how ridiculous, wasteful, unsafe, and downright revolting our system is. Find local sources for the basics from food and soap to pottery and clothes. Become one of the local sources for something. Be part of the local economy. Cook from scratch. Relearn frugality and old-time skills and teach others. Restore the free and the abundant. Earn local money into existence.
- Lighten the overhead
Stop feeding the chiseling bridge-trolls. Go direct for all the goods that you cannot buy locally. Look where the skimming goes on in an economic transaction, and find ways to circumvent the middlemen. The maintenance of elites is a luxury the planet can ill afford. As soon as we refuse to produce the skim-surplus that finances them, they will vanish like mist over a morning swamp.
- Decontaminate one’s self
There are plenty of noxious ideas and patterns of thinking out there, the sort that keep us tied to Babylon’s strings forever. We must become shrewd and discerning. As we disencumber materially, it makes sense to do spring cleaning inside our heads as well. Community is more important than “multiculturalism” or “cosmopolitanism.” Anomie is not something we must accept along with stainless steel and velcro. And good medical care need not be based on an overly high-tech, top-heavy, impersonal model. Dare to imagine — and come to visit — the lovely world outside Babylon’s box.
- Un-victimize
We must learn to defend ourselves and our communities. A time may come when it becomes imperative. In any case, the police are expensive, and not really needed in communities run well by their citizens. The Amish have no need of the police.
And we must learn to ease off the grid, to rethink our vulnerabilities to centralized solutions from electricity to emergency services. There are many ways a small community can provide its own, and become far less vulnerable to sudden problems. Remember the hard winter 2008 out east and its long lapses in utility provision along with a run on generators and attendant theft? None of that is necessary among people who have made reasonable provisions for unusual situations.
And finally, we must again play a key role in keeping our food supply safe. Becoming part of a network of trustworthy farmers, food processors and artisans is where it begins.
- Down-compete
Competition, like fire, is a good servant but a terrible master. It works best when it’s contained within a larger collaborative world. Unfettered competition fails to promote common good, and often leads a race to the bottom. When the emphasis on competition makes people less cooperative, selfishness and free riding are promoted, contributions to public good are reduced, heavy stress takes a toll on health, and we all end up worse off. Take a good look around you at this world out of kilter. One Harvard professor did, and he began to penalize students for lack of teamwork, even at exams. What do American schools call such teamwork? Cheating! Cheat Babylon by playing fair: cooperate.
- Un-waste
Waste too is part of the grid in Babylon. The system encourages it in a myriad ways, from free dumps to curbside unlimited pick up, from its hidden network of sewers to water treatment plants (which are free at a glance, and very expensive and poorly designed if you really look) and toxic dumping. Eeww indeed! Yet the solutions are already out there, from composting to grey water systems and water-purifying wetlands, from reusing to making do. Waste comes from feeding human and planetary energy to the maw of the Machine. Food into waste, life into death. Let us reverse the transformation and reestablish natural cycles.
- Dis management
Letting go of the controlling, managerial paradigm and meddlesome interventionism will be key in regaining our sanity. Interventionism breeds more interventionism and has costs that Babylon hides by “cooking the books.” Remember… when it comes to the universe, we did not cause it, we cannot cure it, and we cannot control it. Let it run itself – it knows how. Ran Prieur once said, “I swear, if we had infinite technological power, at our present emotional level, we would destroy all the clouds, replace them with holograms of clouds, and have fleets of airships drop water, instead of just letting it rain.” Isn’t that modern mis-managerial hubris in a nutshell!? Enough already…
- Down-tech
Individuals and communities can scrutinize technology and pick and choose carefully. Must you really have another kitchen gizmo? Do you want to spend your days staring at a smart-phone, with the Eye following you wherever you go? Do you really need electricity 24/7? Each new artifact has its price, and impacts the well-being of human communities and the natural world. Heed the wise Akela’s call: “Look well, look well, oh wolves. As befits a Free People.”
- Detoxify
Detoxify relationships, that is. Have you noticed? Anti-bully programs in schools are all the rage now, but nobody ever points out that schools exist, in part, to inure kids to being bullied (by teachers, administrators, and curriculum planners), so that when they get absorbed into the workforce, they think it’s normal, just put up and shut up. Domination is the poison in the wellspring of Babylon. Don’t drink from it.
Easier said than done. Bossism in all its forms has contaminated almost everything. Domination is a dirty trick, and we are all tainted. We all play the domination/submission game. But another game is afoot. The partnership game. The more you learn to play it, the less beholden you will be to the con-games of Babylon.
See? You don’t have to leave the country to leave the culture.
February 28, 2015 at 11:14 am
My wife and I have long considered ourselves expatriates in our own country, for all the reasons you explain so thoroughly above. We’ve essentially checked out of the consumer whirled, built a steady state economy for ourselves, and engage in our community to save what little of our wildselves that remains.
The best part is that it’s fun, satisfying and real. Many people respond with, “I wish I could live like you do” and, of course, we tell them:
“It’s easy. Just stop buying stuff, give your TeeVee to someone else, get rid of half of everything you own and find a small, sufficient home to live in for the rest of your life. Then invest your time in learning about the bioregion where you live and defend it from the growth maniacs who seek to destroy it… and you.
What more could anyone desire?
February 28, 2015 at 11:40 am
Want some nits picked? Two grammatical errors in the third line of Un School.
I disagree about Un Vote–They are happy if almost no one votes. It doesn’t take a lot of time and sometimes it might make a minor difference. Therefore, do vote. just don’t waste time trying to get good people elected, etc., as it’s a game where They get to make the rules, and shuffle and cut and deal the cards.
And a lost opportunity in the Un Waste part, to talk about reestablishing natural cycles–waste exists because cycles are broken (as well as because people are brainwashed into massive consumption–Obsessive-Compulsive Consumption Disorder, is that in the DSM?
I like the Bageant quotes–what a wild gem he was! He’s dead now I think.
And the Ran Prieur quote.
I’m not sure you should have brought up the Ukraine thing without spelling out the reality. It’s also legitimate to mention that you speak Russian and understand the region.
I’m also not sure about your advice to drop out quietly. You have more impact if you do it more visibly. On the other hand, if enough people do it to make a difference, to cut the juice to the machine, will They not just have their various legislative bodies pass rules making it illegal to have off-grid solar, or save seeds, or grow your own food? Being quiet might delay that response.
February 28, 2015 at 12:08 pm
Mary, fixed, I think. Unvote? I said judiciously… because I may, occasionally, locally, for a super good reason. Do they care? Sure they care. It legitimizes the system. That’s why in many so called democracies it’s compulsory — as it was under communism.
Will add reestablishing natural cycles. Don’t mean this to be comprehensive… a good list to get people going. There are people with far more detailed knowledge than I to turn to. Yeah, Joe B. is gone, and missed, too.
Spelling out the reality in Ukraine? Yish. That’s over my head. For folks wanting to follow, ClubOrlov has several good pieces, and Global Research has many. My sources have pretty much been various English ones, there is plenty out there if one looks. I tried to find a Ukrainian blogger but was not successful… I don’t speak functional Ukrainian (different from Russian, closer to Czech). And I think I will find the fabulous Pythonesque spoof German TV did — boy did they get jumped on!
Bingo!
More on Ukraine, don’t miss this German show</
With English subtitles.
February 28, 2015 at 6:01 pm
Vera,
Fun piece, you had a lot of good things say and to chew over. I had just finished a couple of Wendell Berry essays, laid it aside, before checking your latest blog entry out. Coincidentally, one of them was “Less Energy, More Life”. You might enjoy it, out of his new collection published in “Our Only World.”
Thanks again,
Brian
March 1, 2015 at 1:25 am
The Ukrainian war is a war of the Corporations!
– The Corporate Takeover of Ukrainian Agriculture:
http://www.oaklandinstitute.org/corporate-takeover-ukrainian-agriculture
Thanks for a nice piece!
We should really start neighborhood schools, as schools are more and more centralized. In Norway it’s now common small children spend 2-3 hours every day on a school bus. What a waste of childhood.
Anyway, the beast is killing itself rapidly.
“That is a good point–the “something different” that we are already into is very low oil prices. This is the prelude to collapse, because we cannot actually pull the oil out at these prices.
You are also right about existing man-made ecosystems needing oil–namely farms and farm substitutes, and the whole transportation system for getting the things distributed to us. There are many parts to it, including processing and distribution. Solar panels don’t fix this problem.” – Gail Tverberg
http://ourfiniteworld.com/2015/02/25/role-of-wages-of-the-common-worker-in-oil-prices-collapse/#comment-54181
March 1, 2015 at 6:41 am
[…] Pulling the plug, part 1 […]
March 1, 2015 at 7:53 pm
Grow your garden…organic. Feed the needy in your area, Plant a row for them. Organize your community/region to be ready to stand on its own and support all its citizens. There’s no waiting for the nation. Think and act local. If we all did this before long it would go national or global.
March 1, 2015 at 8:09 pm
Cliff, you are running ahead. I was talking about what to withdraw from. 🙂
You are right about the garden, of course. Organizing citizens… I don’t know how to do.
March 1, 2015 at 8:50 pm
The model I think of for our wee community is a sphere.
Inside the sphere we have the “real world” of solar energy collected by photosynthesis, trophic exchanges with layers on primary production, water cycles, relationships, etc.
Outside the sphere is the “unreal world” you call Babylon. You cannot deny it; you can only minimize it. So we “poke holes” in our sphere in order to interface with the unreal world. A big hole is labeled “mortgage.” Other sizeable ones are labeled “property taxes” and “insurance.” We’d be willing to get rid of the “insurance” hole, but the “mortgage” hole requires it.
Other holes we can work daily to minimize, such as “groceries,” “hydro” (that’s “electricity” to Mercans), “diesel,” “outside work for needed cash,” etc.
Still other holes, we’ve mostly closed up, such as “pop culture” (dead simple without a TV), “income taxes” (dead simple if you have little income) and “commuting” (dead simple without a job!)
Our goal is to reduce the number and size of those holes.
Can we be get rid of all the holes? Probably not.
For example, we take flak for being “on the grid,” and yet we feel that our wind power supplied over the grid is much better than making bigger holes for “outside work for money to buy solar panels,” which ropes you into the system every few years with “outside work for money to replace the damn batteries again.”
I wish solar panel manufacturers, inverter manufacturers, and battery manufacturers would barter for food. But things aren’t quite that tough yet.
March 1, 2015 at 11:26 pm
@Steinman, we’ll never get there. Soon we’ll have to do without electricity at all, and a little further down the row without metal tools. What will be available are tools of stone, bone and wood. As Gail Tverberg answered me in a recent comment: http://ourfiniteworld.com/2015/02/25/role-of-wages-of-the-common-worker-in-oil-prices-collapse/#comment-54247
“Greer is looking at agricultural societies. The farmers there could just pick up and join another agricultural society if their society collapsed, even if the existing society collapsed.
I don’t see a way we could build up enough of a network of knowledgeable people to build an agricultural society. We would need to do it without electricity, oil or other fuel sources. We don’t know how to go back that far any more. We would need to figure out how to do everything with local materials, everywhere. We would need to build local defenses of cities–moats? All of the attempts at working with wind and solar PV are a waste of time, in this regard. We would after a while even have to do without metal tools–they are just too demanding of wood.”
This will happen soon, didn’t you see the Tverberg graph for future energy production: https://gailtheactuary.files.wordpress.com/2014/01/tverberg-estimate-of-future-energy-production.png?w=640&h=385
So already by 2035 most of us will be unpluged.
March 2, 2015 at 3:00 am
Ukraine: Spot the Nazi: http://steigan.no/2015/03/02/ukraine-spot-the-nazi/
“For main stream media it has apparently been very hard to spot the nazis in Ukraine. Small wonder when we see how cunningly the nazis themselves try to hide their views…”
March 2, 2015 at 7:43 am
Reblogged this on Damn the Matrix and commented:
I found this very compelling, especially the bit about working….
“Down-work, un-work
More work is the source of evils like resource depletion and stress and pointlessly complicated lives; the Earth needs us to stop working so hard! The less we work, the less we feed the Machine. Our work aids the plunder, our de-working slows and stops it, one person at a time. This is why Babylon has always reinforced the message that work is virtuous and important even as it was inventing pointless busywork, harmful work, useless work. Let’s celebrate “Freedom from Labor” Day! Working more is not the way to leisure. Leisure is the way to leisure. Find it before the Machine uses you up and spits you out.
Working less will give the earth a break and repatriate you from ratdom back to humanity. There is plenty of work out there for those who want to do real things, useful things that matter. Once we shed debts and provide ourselves with paid-for basics, money is a small part of the picture. Well-being is what matters, not cranking out a pittance while the planet is plundered more and more. What we need is a “less work ethic”! Less work, less planet being used, more life.”
March 4, 2015 at 4:37 pm
[…] right tone, which is unlikely). It is also inspired by Leavergirl’s recent post called “Pulling the Plug,” though I’d been mulling this post for at least a week prior to reading hers. Make of […]
March 10, 2015 at 1:07 pm
thank you for this column, which I read on Resilience.org. I’ve been trying to withdraw from Babylon for some years, but live in a community where I’m only weird for having backyard garden beds, driving an old car (and longing for public transport/more walkable), etc. I have no support group in person, only online, unless I drive 90 miles to a permaculturist’s homestead. But I loved the link to the satirical “support group” piece – and yes, I have friends who are for some change but get all caught up in Ferguson MO (although they’re not black), or “I can’t breathe”, and who argue with me if I disagree with the President’s latest initiatives … I interact with people here, but they’re all into Babylon and pity me for not having a cell, HD TV, a new car, etc.
March 11, 2015 at 8:26 pm
Down-competer, welcome! I am so sorry it’s extra hard where you live. It’s not easy anywhere to find allies… but here, you are among your own, so do come back. 🙂