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   <title>The Obscene Dilemma - Ebon Fisher</title>
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<center><font color="#1822CD">___________</font>
<p><font color="#6876E7"><font size=+1>THE OBSCENE DILEMMA</font></font>
<br><font color="#1822CD"><font size=+1>_________</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font size=+1><font color="#6876E7">THE DILEMMA:
</font><font color="#1822CD">While
the universe twirls on in its beautiful zoot suit of reflections, affairs
here on Earth are knotting into an obscene dilemma. The human capacity
for production is outpacing the planet's resources --both physical and
mental. From over-fishing to information overload, we have reached the
limits to growth. At an unimaginable scale military-industrial sprawl is
consuming every patch of wilderness, genetic heritage, tribal iconography,
do-it-yourself culture and hard-won solidarity.</font></font>
<p><font size=+1><font color="#6876E7">HYSTERIA: </font><font color="#1822CD">The
same capacity for over-production is driven by technologies which have
also overwhelmed us with our own reflection. Our sparkling information
culture has fermented into a bitter vinegar of splintered disciplines,
websites, journals, cable stations, artificial lifeforms and bionic systems
-- multiplied by an orgy of analytical tools and digital effects. Intoxicated
by the new digital powers, our entertainment engines disgorge a wasteland
of unintegrated dreams and nightmares. The healing ganglia of spiritual
reflection and dialogue recoils from such an overload into an equal and
opposite explosion of fundamentalism, retroism and apathy. Unable to digest
our tricked-out informational effluence, unable to hammer out a collective
vision of progress, our bewildered, freelance psyches sway in torrents
of data. To avoid drowning we cling to islands of tradition, disembodied
memes and shrinking wages. Self-righteous evangelism and artsy recombinations
of style suffice for depth of thought and feeling. Transfixed by born-again
mythologies and the trickster god of infinite digital processing, we stagnate
while the emerging corporate order feeds upon the fermenting data. Our
democratic impulses have become pinched and nauseating before the grinding
momentum of computerized management and control systems. The soul shrinks
before the sprawl of email, humming screens, lifeless parking lots, monitored
phone calls and surveillance cameras. And while our nerves unravel in the
daily grind of data management, the madness of superstition grows everywhere.</font></font>
<p><font size=+1><font color="#6876E7">SOLUTIONS:&nbsp; </font><font color="#1822CD">But
the universe still spins in all its glory, waiting for us to come to our
senses. What follows is an analysis which may sound subversive to many
North Americans who have lost touch with their own democratic heritage,
but is quite ordinary to many citizens and policy-makers around the world.
The US may eventually follow, by sheer necessity, the lead of nations such
as Canada, the Netherlands and Norway.</font></font>
<p><font color="#007AF5"><font size=+1>So here's the New Deal with an environmental
twist:</font></font>
<p><font color="#1822CD"><font size=+1>Planetary exhaustion is often attributed
to human overpopulation, but it is better understood as a consumption problem
--starting with the top of the social pyramid. The bulk of </font>OVER<font size=+1>-consumption
is in the hands of the planet's wealthiest, not to mention a costly military-industrial
infrastructure which goes into maintaining the pyramid. Accelerated by
Ronald Reagan's corporate welfare priorities, the USA has severely tipped
the balance away from that which has a small environmental footprint (local
economies, education and mass transit systems) and towards corporate sprawl,
strip malls and a consumer culture in overdrive.</font></font>
<p><font color="#1822CD"><font size=+1>Regulations, tax policies, higher
minimum wage and a re-birth of civic institutions can easily turn the pendulum
back towards small business, the public and the underlying ecosystem. It's
a matter of striking a balance. Free from monopoly interference, local
energies, efficiencies and environmental sensitivities, can be unleashed.
A broad productivity emerges out of low transport costs, intimate contact
and customized relationships -- folding psychological and environmental
needs into the very definition of productivity. Henry Ford's assembly line
gives way to the network and triple bottom line cost accounting (corporate,
social and environmental).</font></font>
<p><font color="#1822CD"><font size=+1>Henry Ford did not live in the age
of the computer. Cybernetic theories of emergent behaviour are helping
to underscore what many have known for centuries: there is great flexibility,
effectiveness and beauty in small scale operations. It is well-documented
that small-scale farmers use less fertilizer and pesticides by fine-tuning
cultivation practices to suit their local ecosystems. (Agribusinesses are
infamous for using a one-overdose-fits-all approach). In a similar fashion,
small businesses fine-tune their retail and manufacturing practices to
suit local needs. There are complex, unquantifiable benefits to interfacing
with the proud owner of a local coffee shop rather than indifferent wage-slaves
at a Dunkin Donuts. There are also immense efficiencies in local transport
sytems. Walking down the street to a neighbor's store simply requires less
fuel than driving to the shopping mall. And along the way you can bump
into that peep from the hardware store who borrowed your bicycle.</font></font>
<p><font size=+1><font color="#1822CD">Decentralization and redistribution
goes a long way towards a reduction of pollution and disease, an increase
in planetary stability and ultiimately of declining birthrates. The solution
requires a paradigm shift in culture, attitude and priorities. We need
a "civic infrastructure" to counter the corporate infrastructure which
has been building for centuries. But we can't wait around for Donald Trump
to pick up a copy of "Small is Beautiful" and have an epiphany. The people
have to put the squeeze on the system at every level and build the alternate
infrastructure one local node at a time. </font><font color="#4618C6">Changing
tax policies and regulations to reduce corporate welfare is a critical
goal, but along the way we can effect change immediately by turning our
attentions and spare change back to our local cultures, economies and ecosystems.</font></font>
<p><font size=+1><font color="#6876E7">SUBMODERNISM:&nbsp; </font><font color="#1822CD">Below
the spectacle of the rich, below the radar of corporate control systems,
below the Modern/Postmodern babble, lies a realm of local economics, deep
involvement and charm: the Submodern. Flowing freely through the veins
of every culture a wealth of irregular ideas, traditions, technologies
and recycled goods ooze about, unintegrated into the larger machine. Most
of us know such a culture. For many years in Willliamsburg, Brooklyn, my
friends and I, humbled by the borough's depth and character, worked out
our creative compulsions in its abandoned warehouses, experimenting with
local media, local meanings, weaving a culture. For many of us the memory
is still a revelation (even as we watch the neighborhood writhe in real
estate speculation).</font></font>
<p><font size=+1><font color="#6876E7">DANCING ON TABLES: </font><font color="#1822CD">Not
every Submodern phenomenon is clean, desirable or even intelligent. Yet
within its peculiar ranks percolate the secrets to a truly rich, sustainable
society. Herein lies the homemade salsa and the methods of dancing on tables.
Here is the love of trains and bicycles, the impulse to start a small business,
and indigenous organic farming methods. Within the Submodern lies the birthday
party on an industrial waterfront, home-brew Hip Hop clubs and 15-to-1
student/teacher ratios. Herein lies the small, the flexible and the wiggly,
the delights and emotional efficiencies of rambling and puttering.</font></font>
<p><font size=+1><font color="#6876E7">THE TWIRLING: </font><font color="#1822CD">Some
believe we are falling, one genetic hack at a time, into a cybernetic,
post-art, post-human, post-truth, post-nature condition. Although postmodernism
has had a profound role in bringing dubious Western narratives into question,
I believe it has settled into a routine state of fence-sitting: still marveling
at the loss of absolutes while dipping a toe into the waters of madness.
Here, below the noise, is an immediate involvement with the dreams at hand.
We nurture nothing but self-evident joy within the local twirl.</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#1822CD">-- Ebon Fisher, 2004</font>
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