[Texgreen] Explaining the dynamics of recent politics
Craig MIller
loveandrage@ureach.com
Mon, 8 Jan 2007 13:11:43 -0500
Interesting .... thanks for passing this on. I will watch for sure. Where did
you come across this?
i hope you know the answer to why not let the businesses do what they do instead
of having a political go between. Makes me appreciate the corrupt gov't more
than i did. The gov't is not far removed from that business model though, but
least we have the miniscule amount of influence that we do in gov't. But then
again, gov't never acts before a tragedy. Businesses sometimes does.
I guess it comes down to which, free business or political gov't, would serve
long term future interests. Which one plans ahead more for protecting those
things in the world that doesn't have a voice? Those things of value that
aren't consumers and don't have a voice in politics? Who attends to those
things and will act ahead of time to sustain those things well into the future?
Which do you think?
Craig Miller
---- On Sun, 7 Jan 2007, Roger Baker (rcbaker@eden.infohwy.com) wrote:
Here is the explanation that seems to me to best explain the voter
behavior expressed by the last few decades of American and British
politics. It is in the form of this hour long British-produced
internet video that anyone with a high speed connection can watch at
this link:
http://tinyurl.com/w5pmw
Here Dick Morris explains how he successfully saved Clinton's second
term by using the same Madison Avenue marketing strategies used by
business to appeal to consumers, based on psychological focus groups,
etc. It explains why Reagan and Thatcher prevailed. Clinton's labor
secretary Robert Reich is featured with his own commentary a number
of times, as well as various other political strategists and
psychologists.
It explains what politicians have to do to get elected in a world of
voters programmed to think along consumerist marketing lines in terms
of feeding back their subconscious short-term self-interest goals,
and the policy contradictions that lie therein.
The conclusions of this video seem to me important enough that I took
the time to transcribe the concluding segments below, verbatim. --
Roger, Austin
"...New Labor is faced with a dilemma. A system of consumer democracy
that they have embraced has trapped them into a series of short term
and often contradictory policies. There are now growing demands that
they fulfill a grander vision. That they use the power of government
to deal with the problems of growing inequality and the decaying
social fabric of the country. But to do this they will have to
appeal to the electorate to think outside their own self interest.
And this would mean challenging the now dominant Freudian theory of
human being, of selfish, instinct-driven individuals. Which is a
concept of human beings which has been fostered and encouraged by
business because it produces ideal consumers. Although we feel we are
free, in reality, we like the politicians, have become the slaves of
our own desires. We have forgotten that we can be more than that.
That there are other sides to human nature:
ROBERT REICH: "Fundamentally here we have two different views of
human nature and of democracy. You have the view that people are
irrational. That they are bundles of unconscious emotion. That comes
directly out of Freud. And businesses are very able to respond to
that; thats what they have honed their skills doing. That what
marketing is really all about; what are the symbols, the music, the
images, the words will appeal to these unconscious feelings.
Politics must be more than that. Politics and leadership are about
engaging the public in a rational discussion and deliberation about
what is best. And treating people with respect in terms of their
rational abilities to debate what is best. If it is not that, if it
is Freudian, if it is basically a matter of appealing to the same
basic unconscious feelings that business appeals to, then why not let
business do it? Business can do it better. Business knows how to do
it. Business after all is in the business of responding to those
feelings."
_______________________________________________
texgreen mailing list
texgreen@lists.gp-us.org
http://lists.gp-us.org/mailman/listinfo/texgreen
________________________________________________
Get your own "800" number
Voicemail, fax, email, and a lot more
http://www.ureach.com/reg/tag