6 Comments

"Funnily enough, given the damage that successive American governments have wrought in the period since the Civil Rights era, I agree with the activists. There do need to be Reparations paid, but not as recompense for a distant past, but as an acknowledgement of the crimes committed by well-meaning, but atrocious Government Interventions. All those left behind in America, be they Black, White or Brown are in desperate need of Forty Acres and a Mule, and America cannot afford to wait another generation to see the further degradation of a once proud blue collar class."

The problem in America (and increasingly in other places as well) is that "the system" has worked almost too well... What I mean by that is that the Democratic Party Complex (similar to the Military Industrial Complex) has a deep and vested interest in maintaining a continuous level of misery that can feed into their own political and financial accounts. And of course, Republicans are more than happy to play the villains. There has never been so much money as there is now, injected into American politics. It is easy to forget that a handful of companies in the United States alone, have greater financial power than many nations. The money has reached numbers that are truly astronomical.

Government has not failed at all. It has done precisely what it is designed to do: it has aggrandized itself and squandered the fortunes of its own people to seek its own maximum benefit.

Find ONE genuine, dyed-in-the-wool Democrat who will ever, ever, ever admit that their approach has essentially enriched Washington and impoverished the "communities" they set out to save and you'll find the answer to this problem.

Find ONE genuine, dyed-in-the-wool Republican who will ever, ever, ever admit that their is a meaningful place for public intervention to help those in distress and you'll find an answer.

But in both instances you find people who know one thing: desperate people are worth a fortune. Poverty is, was, and always will be, a fucking cash cow...

As for "reparations" let the DNC lead the way. They have deep pockets. Maybe the Clinton Global Initiative can get the ball rolling...

Expand full comment

Wow, that's an exceptional take on the issue. Of course, I agree completely- but in my own small way hope to contribute to the growing sentiment that our current leaders are no longer fit for purpose. Of course, there are exceptions- I do so enjoy the way Katie Porter sticks it to CEO's- many of the more entertaining ones are to found on YouTube. I am also a great admirer of Dan Crenshaw. Ironically, I believe many others to be good people- it's just they've allowed themselves to be subverted by process and political struggle, instead of spending their time in the far more important task of digging deep into problems to understand the mechanics at play. Easy answers make for crap solutions, and of course there is the enrichment problem. The other problem is that many believe that public sector work is a public good, per se- when in reality nothing could be worse, if both taxpayer funds and labour are wasted, it is doubly a blow to productive economics.

Expand full comment

A couple of days between essays Geary! Excellent as always tho. Those Peabody estates, it looks like how it should be done. Are they still functional or has wokeness done for them what the 'projects' did for social housing in the States?

Expand full comment

Nah, they are still operational. They are charitably funded so the wokies are more less capable of disrupting them...

Expand full comment

Great article Geary.

I sometimes feel that we're living in a symbiotic and yet deliberate part feudal and part capitalist society and although not mentioned as such it works in its own way to promote the capitalistic side by its very contrast to what happens if one just doesn't escape the feudal world of self-realisation.

The ladder out of poverty and lower class serfdom is seldom achieved easily as its very design is rung with broken steps and those at the bottom cling to hope that those above will somehow pull them upwards, but they won't. I've noticed the numbers dramatically increase in self-employment and here we have at least one effective system that can if used allow through personal effort and easy access a means to social uplift. It is from this lower economic class where we'll often find mechanics, gardeners, plumbers, decorators and handyman self enterprise grow from. Yet bear in mind that this demands of people a number of skills. They will need to be resourceful, determined, be able to deal with others and be competent, skilled, efficient.

There is a need for such skills and a shortage of such. I always wondered why it wasn't a policy started within school, whereby a certain kind of kid couldn't spend more time in vocational training and be shown why maths and English and even physics were enticed into that system if only to teach at an early age the connection between academic education and practical necessity. There would be many future-come unemployed with no skill, no job, no hope who with such vocational training that could by government grant aided programmes find themselves progressing straight from school into meaningful work. As a business owner myself who has gone through such a process I'd of found the process far easier if it had been one of developed purpose. For a start one would incentivise employers and would teach the kids business skills, admin training, tax laws, proficient in and out house training instead of sending clueless kids into the job market that have no idea of anything except their own vulnerabilities.

One thing for sure is that the lower spectrum of society taking in benefits and free housing is not going to wish to have to suddenly work to pay for what is freely available. Grant incentives and a quick way to progress into incentivised pay is what matters. At the moment there is just this net negative decent segment of society stuck in despair and limbo and they're modelled as unintelligent wasters and grifters by such propagandised programmes such as benefit street, whereas many are just able and willing people seeking a chance to actually progress their lives.

I'd love to have a school phone me and say we've got this kid who you may be interested in a grant assisted 4 year apprenticeship. He's passed his maths exams and has 2 years experience in masonry at college level and excels at business skills. Give me this kid and you can stick your grants up your butt cos I probably won't need the justification of them.

Right now I see a have's and a have not's society with the have not's being classed like untouchables and it feeds feudalism and criminality. As Geary often mentions, if we could turn young men into working, hopeful, confident young men then perhaps that would go a long way toward a more stable family life for them, their partners and the next generation of children. There really needs to be a push toward activating a decent amount of hopeless serfs back into functional human beings.. That includes the lost potential of all those children within our shared society.

Expand full comment

“ I would tentatively suggest that fathers likely have a moderating influence on male peer groups, which collectively pushes the dynamic away from the antisocial and toward the prosocial.”

I think you’re very likely right about that. Fatherhood has a profound influence not just on children but on fathers - they become less selfish and more inclined to serve others. They start to want to build or maintain societal institutions rather than operate outside of them. For some men it’s a profound shift. Fathers build community, including by having a positive influence on their male childless friends.

Expand full comment