How to Navigate Our Low-Trust, Increasingly Dysfunctional Society and Economy

Posted by freedomforall 3 months, 1 week ago to Philosophy
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Excerpt:
"Economies and political systems can also be understood as high-trust or low-trust. If the political system excels at rewarding insiders and incumbents while leaving critical problems unsolved, citizens have little reason to trust the system.

The same is true of economies that greatly enrich insiders and incumbents at the expense of the citizenry via monopoly/cartel price-gouging, shrinkflation, degrading the quality of goods and services and the immiseration of standard services, forcing customers to "upgrade" from wretched to merely dismal.

Conventional pundits and economists are constantly whining that Americans "just don't get it": they tout our soaring per capita wealth, i.e. we're getting richer, so everyone should be delighted, yet only 20% of the public are "satisfied with the way things are going."

What the well-compensated pundits and economists are ignoring (or are paid to ignore) is the decay of the U.S. from a high-trust-functional to a low-trust-dysfunctional society and economy: Americans will still go out of their way to aid strangers, but their trust in institutions has plummeted to lows, as has their trust in the political-corporate elites' leadership: politicians and corporate managers have an enviable record of self-enrichment but very little to show in terms of putting the long-term interests of the citizenry above their own short-term gains.

People understand the name of the game now is to spout all the expected optimistic PR of "innovation" and "serving the public" while maximizing their private gain at the expense of the nation. Offshoring America's essential industrial supply chains wasn't done to serve the nation; it was done to maximize profits, 90% of which flow to the top 10%. Pushing us into debt servitude is highly profitable, but it isn't benefiting us or the nation.

Americans were told to trust long, hyper-globalized single-source supply chains as "efficient" (i.e. profitable) and trustworthy, yet they've discovered these supply chains are vulnerable and fragile. Americans were told that corporate monopolies were selling them "innovations" when in fact they were being sold highly addictive (and therefore highly profitable) goods and services.

Americans were told that their financial security was increasing even as the U.S. economy became increasingly dependent on hyper-financialized asset bubbles and central bank bailouts, the precise opposite of stability. Rather than producing more financial security for the bottom 80%, these "innovations" greatly expanded the gulf between the wealthy and the increasingly precarious bottom 80%.

Americans were told to trust that the hyper-centralization of political and financial power would benefit them, when the evidence is piling up that this hyper-centralization has increased the dysfunction of core institutions and the fragility of essential systems.
...
What happens when high-trust decays to low-trust is the circle of reliable, trustworthy sources and people shrinks to the local, decentralized level. Rather than trust Big Ag, Big Fast-Food and supply chains of highly processed glop to feed us, we start turning to local sources of real food.

In the same way, we rediscover the value of thinking for ourselves rather than accepting self-serving memes-of-the-day. We rediscover the value of what Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote about in his 1841 essay Self-Reliance (free text, Project Gutenberg).

Emerson counsels us to "be our best selves," and not to count property wealth above all else. ("They measure their esteem of each other by what each has, and not by what each is.")"
SOURCE URL: https://charleshughsmith.blogspot.com/2024/01/how-to-navigate-our-low-trust.html


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