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Is This the Start of the Century of "We"?

I read a statement years ago that the 20th Century was the century of Freud. And with any luck, the 21st Century would be the century of Jung. Not sure who said it but it really resonated with me. My take on Jung was that he emphasized the idea that we are all a part of a whole, with each of us having individual gifts contributing to that whole. When we look at another, we see ourselves. In the BBC documentary “The Century of the Self”, Adam Curtis explores the use of Freud’s theories to direct people away from a communal way of thinking and into rampant mirror-gazing.

The premise of the film is that the birth of propaganda/public relations/marketing began with Freud’s nephew Edward Bernays when he was hired by the Wilson administration to sell the idea of “making the world safe for democracy”. Unfortunately, that meant becoming involved in the hideous carnage called World War I and forcing your neighbors to buy War Bonds or be put in jail. After the war, he was asked by the tobacco industry to use his PR skills to figure out how to sell cigarettes to women. He branded cigarettes “torches of freedom” that would challenge male power simply by lighting up. From then on, advertising would no longer speak to people’s needs, but to their inner desires and yearnings. And freedom would now be defined as freedom of choice.

And so the transformation of the American citizen into the American consumer began in earnest. Americans were sold that they needed clothes that showed their individuality and made them sexy. Men were sold that the kind of car they drove showed who they were; powerful and, yes, sexy. The kind of soap you bought made you happier and more admired.

What we are witnessing in Zuccotti/Liberty Park with the #Occupy Wall Street could be the great turning away from the century of “me” to the century of “we”.
At least it has opened up the discussion of what we really need rather than what we want. The greatest need right now seems to have our voices heard and a need to take back the meaning of words like “public” and “cooperative” and “social”. It is a pushback against all the punditry that insist on a label, logo, banner, slogan, brand, buzzword, sound bite, pitch or demand.

No, we will no longer be defined as consumers. We will no longer be cogs in your machine. We are free men and women. We do not define freedom as the right to choose between 100 brands of cereal. Our definition of freedom is freedom from domination by corporations and their agendas. Our definition of freedom is not to be subservient to the 1%. We are taking back our humanity. We are taking back our public spaces and our commons. We are a community; a community of concerns. We care about each other and the planet we inhabit. There is no expiration date on what is happening around the world and at last in the United States.

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Submitted by libbyliberal on

Very moving anlaysis, montana. ty!

I am thinking once again of the toxicity of tv brainwashing 24/7 Americans into embracing a passive and/or reactive consumer identity not a PROACTIVE citizen and human and SPIRITUAL identity. (I wish people would take my tv blackout suggestion between Oct. 25-30 seriously ... I think that would be a profound beginning of separation from the massive corporate mainstream media psyops power and control, but I don't know how to network it about).

I also think of Emerson's long ago "transcendentalism", reading your references to Jung.

From wikipedia on Emerson:

We live in succession, in division, in parts, in particles. Meantime within man is the soul of the whole; the wise silence; the universal beauty, to which every part and particle is equally related, the eternal ONE. And this deep power in which we exist and whose beatitude is all accessible to us, is not only self-sufficing and perfect in every hour, but the act of seeing and the thing seen, the seer and the spectacle, the subject and the object, are one. We see the world piece by piece, as the sun, the moon, the animal, the tree; but the whole, of which these are shining parts, is the soul.

Finally, I think of Joplin's bottom-line line "Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose."

Submitted by MontanaMaven on

In Romans, "we are all of one body, with gifts differing". That is the quote that begins Isabel Myers book on psychological type "Gifts Differing." Also in David Korten's book "The Great Turning; from Empire to Earth Community", he discusses "the shadow". We must confront our dark side as individuals and as a nation. The people in Liberty Squares everywhereto call out our dark side and are asking us to take the time to look inside ourselves.

I'm in the "entertainment" business and so am conflicted on a daily basis. I can say that there are times when I am proud of the content that is produced on TV. Recently there was the wonderful "Treme" about life in New Orleans after Katrina. I still can't do without a dose of "I Love Lucy". Many friends of mine have given up TV and use a television as a monitor and use content providers such as Netflix.

So to the question from the pundits, "What do they want?", the answer seems to be "No, you don't get it. We don't want. We are discovering what we really need. "
And it's looking like we really need each other but were taught that "you are on your own". From this basis of cooperation , we can then start to build something different.

Oh, and have fun doing it. Bring on the clowns! (but not mimes, please. They still scare me).

Submitted by MontanaMaven on

A poem by Lizard of 4&20 Blackbirds:

the space we occupy
is not just physical space
our intentional presence
extends beyond our bodies
and connects us to space
in the process of being re-
claimed across the world

intentional occupations
are spreading
and general assemblies
must explore each frayed thread
ready to snap because

once again a great depression descends
as the 1% consolidates capital

they want to Monsanto our food
and Carlyle our precious water
they want to occupy every patch of dirt
and occupy our imagination

to prevent us from envisioning a space
beyond the reach of their control…

We really have to know who the enemy is. They have occupied our minds and now we have to resist.
In Missoula they are trying to privatize their water, so they clearly do have a sense of who the enemy is.