Hi everyone,
I thought I might make this a short one, then one paragraph in realised, that just wasn't gonna happen. Grab a coffee, here I go.
I love a Rub I have read quite a few of your posts on this and other topics, and I can see the perspective you are approaching life from. However, I see some gaping flaws in your self-professed "superior rational analysis". Firstly, rational analysis is just thinking. So your statement actually says "superior thinking". I kinda think that's a big grab. Your way of thinking may be more complex than another's, perhaps your thinking powers along very quickly, where another's may take longer. However to say superior is a judgement based statement and you also stated "it is impossible for anyone to judge another person". Yet judgement of another person doesn't begin with thinking they are wrong. It can begin with thinking you are "superior", it's kind of like saying "i don't judge you for being a moron".
So putting aside the superior idea of your thinking, let's just look at the bones of it. A "society" is quite simply a group of people living in an organised fashion for the benefit of all members of that society. You can nitpick and argue semantics over it, but that's still the gist of a society. Now it could be 5 people living in a tree on the edge of the Congo, or it could be the entire population of the earth and the larger questions facing everyone. But a society is still just a group of people, it isn't a separate, stand alone, tangible thing that can be either thanked or blamed or made "responsible". Those concepts must be inherently held at an individual level. Society is not government. Government may be a production of a society, but they aren't the same thing.
Governments and politics are always going to have an element of corruption attached to them. You have all heard the saying "power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely". That's the challenge isn't it. We are all flawed human beings. We all make mistakes, we may start a journey with one intent and end up somewhere completely different. But even in countries where democracy (not perfect) does not exist, we have seen in recent times the ability of people power. The individuals band together and often in the face of extreme adversity they put their very lives at risk to lobby for change from their leaders. So societies are shaped by the individual human beings that create them. Therefore, it brings us to the question of personal responsibility.
As my frame of reference is small in regard to other nations, my next comments relate to life in Australia, based on our "society".
The topic of this thread is "poor people only have themselves to blame". What are we blaming them for again? Are we blaming them because their bank balance is low, or because their car is 20 years old, or because they live in a suburb we never would, or are we blaming them because they live on the street? None of these things are reasons to blame them. I am not rich, far from it. I went to the supermarket this morning and three items came to $10.03. I had precisely $10 in my purse, and had to run out to the car to find a five cent piece, which I located. I have zero dollars now and no clients until Thursday, but I get staying at home allowance from Centrelink, that will be there Wednesday, I can live out of the cupboard til then. Now, I could easily go and get a job in the corporate world, put in the long hours, become focussed on that, climb the corporate ladder (I've done it before), and then I imagine when I go to the supermarket I wouldn't have to worry about adding it up as I go, because there'd be tons of money in the bank to pay for it. Would I be happier? Is there something to blame me for because I have NO money in my purse right now.
But, if I were complaining about having no money in my purse, now that's something different. Oh, I've got no money. I can't make a phone call because I can't buy anymore credit til Wednesday. The fuel light in my car is on, I can't even go and visit a friend, boo hoo I'm so poor, I'm so lonely, help me help me. Now there's something to blame. I can change my situation, I just don't want to at the moment. So can the homeless person, so can the single mum, so can the laid off mine worker and his family when they have to live in a one bedroom flat with three kids because their house got repossessed.
Remember too, change takes time and perseverence.
See, my personal philosophy is that we create our own realities, and even the extremely unfortunate random events it doesn't appear we could possibly have had any control over, we can still rise above. We do always have choices, and the previous comment
"The idea of "choice" is also completely flawed in philosophical principal. It does not stand to my superior rational analysis. You may be able to choose BETWEEN options (and I mean may), but you certainly cannot choose what those choices are."
I disagree. We always have almost limitless choices, what we do not control are the consequences of those choices. So when someone says they have no choices, what they mean is there aren't any choices for them that they like the consequences of that choice. Oh well.
I was teaching my 3 year old this morning, that if she won't let me take her night nappy off and put on her pants and get dressed for the day, that's cool. She'll want me to do it eventually because she'll be uncomfortable and that will be more important than rebelling against her Mum. But the consequence of not letting me take her nappy off are that I'm not going to start the DVD player up and put on her Disney DVD. Choices, consequences.
The aforementioned career or job that I don't have at the moment. Choice. I don't want to work so many hours that I have no time left to blow bubbles with my baby, I don't want to work so many hours that I feel guilty if I sit down for a smoke and a sudoku. So therefore I choose to work my little cottage industry, just two days a week from home, and allow my concentration to be on my family. There is no judgement attached to other families who do it differently, just that this is where I am right now.
If you don't like sleeping under a tree, then don't. You don't have to, there are options and choices. Yes, they might mean a little less alcohol or gambling, or perhaps following house rules, or some other "nuisance" thing you don't have to put up with when you live free on the streets, but like the nappy/dvd situation, it's all a trade off.
The things to blame are when you see a family on Today/Tonight and they are bleating about how bad things are for them this year and they don't even have money to buy little johnny a xmas present. But in the corner there's an empty cardboard carton of Emu Export, and an overflowing ashtray on the table. School shoes, OMG we can't possibly afford them, pass us the bong honey.
At my supermarket at xmas time, they get the most amazing toys in. Things with lights and bells and whistles or dolls with multiple outfits and accessories, and many of these very very large boxes come with price tags of $8, $9, $12 etc. One packet of cigarettes nowadays is around $12. So what do you reckon poor people, if you smoke, how about skipping 25 of them for a xmas present. I know not everyone smokes, it's an analogy. Buy the paper every day? There's over $10 per week, how about magazines, how about non-essential, non-nutritious food choices? I'm not saying I never do any of these things, but if I needed shoes for my kid, I wouldn't buy the Woman's Weekly. Choices choices choices.
In this country we have government funded payments (we can argue the merits of those in another post), welfare organisations (Red Cross, St Vinnies, Salvos et al) that give food parcels etc, clinics providing health care, free counselling services, financial counselling services that will help you work your shit out, facilities and resources coming out of our ears (I'm sure however that somone is going to point out the glaring hole that exists making it clearly impossible for them not to be complete victims). There is no need for any individual in this country to not have the basics of food, shelter and clothing. I do not blame naked, hungry, homeless bloke, but I'm not going to give him clothes, food or a home. I don''t laugh at him, if he sits next to me at the bus stop, I'm happy to have a chat, he may even have some really interesting stuff to talk about, (after all he's naked, hungry and homeless, it's gotta change your perspective). If he's happy being that way, good luck. If he's not, fair enough, what are you going to do about it.
Ok, gotta stop now, so many other thoughts, but they are kinda off topic. Might make a new thread and see who wants to talk about shit.
Love
swingingstories
PS: The choices and consequences thing works, the night nappy is off, the DVD is on.