Sunday 22 December 2013

The Hypocrisy of Benevolence

I don't seem to be able to write anything of much use at the moment - or at least I have no inclination towards such an endeavour in my present state. A general torpidity of spirit debars all action. Even eating is tedious, though it is 8pm and I have finally surrendered to the tyrant of appetite, betraying a day of asceticism, sliding a solitary bean burger into the oven mere minutes ago. A fantastic disc of protein, how charming! What nutriment!

But this is all achingly demoralising - I can usually tap this blasted keyboard at a fair pace, stamping my seal of bollocks onto all things at a steady canter. Presently, however, each clack of brittle plastic is an internal triage, a torment of indecision.

What I can do, and I will have it known that I can do it quite well, is copy and paste something I have written before. I should explain what it is, and so I think I will explain what it is. It is an essay on poverty I wrote for the 'New Statesman and the Webb Memorial Trust Essay Competition'. It was shortlisted, bringing with it the prospect of a shiny reception in Parliament, with important people and important trousers. Trousers mere mortals' buttocks cannot hope to animate.

I immediately decided not to attend. I cannot stand celebratory events - there is something unremittingly bathetic about them, being wet farts in event form - but I will often attend. What is worse is the brand of artificial, meaningless event this invitation to Parliament was perpetuating.

Yet I still went! Reason cannibalised its fellow Instinct, and led me to a thoroughly unreasoned decision. It seemed that, if I won the £1000 prize, or even the £500 runner-up prize, the expense of a suit and travel to London would be more than amortised. What hubris! This is like justifying the consumption of a sandwich because one might become hungry in the near future.

The event, unsurprisingly, followed precisely the progression of all events in my life, and I imagine in world history, which preceded it. There was an initial pang of excitement, agitation, novelty as we rolled through security (barrels of gunpowder rudely seized from us) and into the bowels of this stone leviathan. There was a sense of power to be savoured as security people, on seeing our invitation, did not arrest us on the spot. The thought of a strip search could not be further from their minds (though this may be owing to my ridiculous state of dress).

Making awkward ingress into the venue of the event was just that - awkward. Strange people proffered glistering libations from great platters, and exquisite viands exploded from all directions, tending towards the digestive systems of those in attendance. Here I was, a youthful wight being inducted into some debauched, Hellenic symposium! Grapes falling into my mouth wherever I moved! Breastfed by the Virgin Mary herself!

A preponderance of important trousers was indeed found - but important jackets too! And shirts! I had never seen so much importance in all my life! There is a terrible hostility in the construct of the suit - it being almost an emulation of medieval armour, rendered in flimsy fabric for the purposes of minimal encumbrance. I imagine there is a feeling of security to be experienced when one dons a suit of armour - indeed, it would be odd if this were not the case - yet is this not what the suit hopes to achieve? Everyone must certainly, if only subconsciously, acknowledge the absolute nonsense of the entire pretense; the idea that some strips of cotton sanctify their host and his morality is of course ridiculous. And yet, all wear suits, contented that they are fitting in, fulfilling that hideous precept propounded by only the most insipid individuals. 'Just fit in and don't make a fuss', I am frequently told, more often than not by two despairing parents, but is this not a call for the renunciation of the human spirit? I am quite serious. Homogenisation is the most pernicious force in the universe. All who slip under its thrall perish immediately - their existences become supererogatory. I will have no such fate for myself. This grim world is bleak enough without the shred of beauty all have access to - the personality. Nothing fascinates me more than a unique individual, but nothing vacates my mind more than a dull character, a common spirit. I must state, I do not believe that this common dullness of character is due to the universal blandness of humanity, rather it is individuals who are either too timid to seize haecceity for themselves, or it is society which tears it from them, in an act of utter spite. The idea that man might be debarred from unleashing his true character is the force which necessitates liberty - today we talk of liberty as having the freedom to subsist, or to be a part of an inherently malignant society. Well, fuck that! Liberty is the personal autonomy requisite for the perfection of the human spirit!

What an odd tangent. The path of my narrative hit some sort of impasse, ricocheting wildly at an oblique angle. I believe I was expatiating on the profusion of digestive fodder at this place - so antithetical to my solitary bean burger! There is nothing wrong with an abundance of food and drink, indeed this seems preferable. What does seem to me to be quite incredible, however, is such plenitude and wealth at an event devoted to the discussion of the topic of poverty.

It occurred to me, before the day had even arrived, that this was all impossibly absurd. Were there to be cash prizes, and wine, and exquisite morsels dispensed as if with some sort of neurosis, when there are half a million people in this country using food banks? Would £1500 of cash prizes be best spent on some, and I hate to pass judgement here, middle class kids with attractive CVs? There seemed to be something so symptomatic of the entire system, so microcosmic, in this tiny event. There is a tendency today to pontificate endlessly on matters, when of course this does nothing for material circumstances. These ridiculous discussions on poverty and food banks somehow tend to the financial reward of journalists and politicians. Yet what is there to discuss? In a civilised society, there should be no need for food banks whatever. That this is a real problem causes me hideous agony. The agony of comfortability, perhaps! The agony of hypocrisy, the agony of the weak. I am oddly rather glad I did not win anything at this blasted event; I considered such a possibility before I attended. What would I do? I certainly couldn't keep the money. £1000 to write a few words on how this country allocates money so unfairly? I would be mad! In many ways I regret taking part at all, for it reveals at least the yearning for such a poisoned chalice to be bound to my conscience.

Money is nonsense, its discussion should be banned! If we allocated all wealth equally, and held solemn silence on the matter thence, this world would be a more beaming place. I feel as if my hand has been forced in a world in which such an outcome is undesirable for ruling elites - I spend my life talking of money, that we might no longer talk of money! And politics too - I have no interest in politics whatever, but I cannot retain silence in the face of rampant malice!

I feel a strange urge to scrub myself of attendance of this fucking event - but this is this problem! I criticise the whole phenomenon, and recognised its blight before the event took place, and yet I still attended! I talk of individualism, and I am as obedient as the others. What am I to do? This world is so strewn with antinomy and strife, I scarcely know what to believe or how to act! This world is a stage for great discord between ideas, held by men who cannot prove their verity. And what if one forges the perfect template for this world? It shall be ignored, and cannot be verified besides! Then take my essay - it's worthless!


*


The Webbs and William Beveridge believed that “full employment” was a prerequisite for removing poverty. Is this true today – and, if so, how would you achieve it?


There is perhaps no better time to talk about unemployment and poverty. These are two of the great elephants in the room, occasionally gestured towards but rarely apprehended with any true vigour. Before I do so myself, I must begin by stating that I think there is the kernel of something pernicious embedded in the question I am about to answer. Unemployment is, contrary to what unemployment figures would have one believe, not simply a number which needs to be reduced to nothing. 'Full employment' is a fairly abstract concept which really means very little in isolation. Very little, that is, unless the quality of work is also taken into account. The question posed seems to intimate that work's virtue lies in its toilsome nature, not in its ability to bring some prosperity to a worker's immediate circumstances. Full employment itself is not something to be pursued as an ultimate paragon of welfare; there is nothing virtuous in toil for toil's sake, indeed this seems to me to be a fairly sadistic notion.

For this very reason, the flat figure of the unemployment rate fails to sincerely indicate the scale of the unemployment problem we have. Many workers have had to receive pay cuts, all workers doubtless face a more mercenary and perfunctory interview process with the tide of spare labour threatening to drown them at all times, and a huge number of workers will have had to accept part-time positions instead of their previous full-time positions. None of this is so much as hinted at by the unemployment figure. There is something cold and sterile about this monolithic, solemn number which is supposed to tell us a great deal about the economy. The thing it sadly overlooks is the workers it ostensibly represents. I don't believe there is any sense in mindlessly striving for full employment if the employment itself exploits workers.

This said, I do believe the chief benefit of work should be explored here. Work provides a wage, the sum of which can be used to bolster one's material circumstances. I think this is quite unobjectionable. Does it therefore follow that we should work as much as possible, or that full employment is a prerequisite to the eradication of poverty? I don't think so.

There is, at present, a rather large stigma attached to the prospect of unemployment. We all remember how, as the recession reared its ugly head half a decade ago, there was, quite rightly, universal obloquy waiting for the extravagant bankers who had successfully uprooted the world economy. What I find quite incredible, however, is how this condemnation has been transferred, by the power of a scaremongering press and a wicked sect of politicians looking for scapegoats, to the unemployed – the very people lost in the fallout of all this mess. It is they who are destroying the economy; it is they who are living the good life. I think we have been drip-fed this quixotic imagery of the life of the unemployed to such an extent that is has formed into one colossal, delusory edifice in the public mind, some sort of black stalagmite in the common consciousness, a giant receipt spike onto which all resentment can be hurled in a time of frustration.

In the public mind, the unemployed wake in the morning, ring for room service, then after a full cranial massage languidly jab a red button, following which they are lowered, in a Wallace and Gromit fashion, into the breakfast chamber beneath. William Morris wallpaper clings to every wall, notes scribbled on it from periods of acute paper shortage. A winsome eunuch polishes hunting rifles in a corner, preparing them for a day of action. Japanned furniture is littered grandly round the room with a perfect diffusion, and the stench of expensive oak bores its way to the entrant's brain.

Outside, the clack of gardeners' shears floats lazily across from the Elizabethan knot garden. A gilded palanquin has been laboriously transported from the servants' quarters and is waiting for its eximious charge. A fittingly gilded bottom is winched into place by scrabbling personnel, and all prepare for a jolly good day of shooting.

Firstly, the problem here is that the victims of these shameless and, worse still, boring attacks lack any real voice. They necessarily lack positions in the media, they necessarily lack a workers' union. I have always believed that scurrilous attacks on another's virtue are perfectly fine when the victim is rich and powerful, and indeed they are necessary when this is the case. The reproach shackled to the banking 'community' (admittedly an odd term to ascribe to such savagery) was necessary for political and moral reasons. What I cannot countenance, and what makes me heave with despair, is the execration lashed against the poor. It seems to me to be an obvious code of conduct in politics, and indeed in general, that one should never assail those whose power and wealth pales in comparison to one's own. It is therefore indicative of the brutal desperation of economic crises that not just the few, but the majority, should stoop to such depths. The worm of asperity, aided by a truculent press, begins to burrow into the everyday person, warping a desire for betterment into a need to find a repository for blame, and a repository which cannot object, at that. I think people have tired of attacking politicians and bankers; there is respectively an evasiveness and an indifference which mars the whole endeavour. What is far more suggestive of progress is to agree – falsely – that the unemployed are wicked. They live for nothing but to see the economy collapse. They refrain from work for their snooty aloofness and unwillingness to enter into society.

Then we may continue with this idiotic witch hunt, turning to our fellow disenfranchised and railing against their blight, or we may shear the manacles of grim condemnation and attack the underlying problems instead. Are people unemployed because they enjoy living in hunger, coldness and inactivity? This is the first question any reasoning individual must ask. Or – and this is a wild concept – is it because we are still in the gelid clasps of what is the most enduring recession of recent history? It is because the government, morally immune under the jovial flag of austerity, decided to ridicule the unemployed, rather than create any jobs for them.

Then we must break the immense stigma attached to unemployment. Stigma may encourage people to find jobs, though I doubt even this, but what it certainly does is divert responsibility from politicians and bankers. These are the people who should feel the weight of public frustration, not the powerless unemployed. To attack the weak is a shameful offense, and it does nothing practical either. Perhaps the unemployment bashers, so ready to broach their barbed tongues, could agree to devote more of their income to taxes, which can be used for improving the quality and quantity of jobs. Instead we have a situation where those who earn in excess of £150,000 per year are receiving tax cuts – a harrowing reality. This is typical of the government's approach to this recession – let the rich get richer and let the poor stay unemployed. Whether it be through an undersold Royal Mail, undersold banks, coercing the unemployed to work for free, the conspicuity with which this is all done makes it almost beyond the reach of satire. Injustice is meted out with such ferocity today that the onlooker doubts his vision, or doubts his instinctive views on what is right and what is wrong. To break the stigma against the unemployed is important in reducing poverty because to blame the poor is the abnegation of responsibility for all else; poverty can never be deracinated when its victims are seen as complicit in their plight.

Yet equality is what will eradicate poverty. To gaze on the privations of one's coevals with utter disgust should be a natural rather than a minority response. An implacable agony at the immiseration of others would be enough to end hunger overnight. Simply, we do not need a greater work ethic, or more working hours – we need compassion. There is enough pie for all to be weeping blueberry juice, but at present the average person is cheated of his 'fair share', to quote the government. A fair share for the majority today is to work for little – or no – pay, whilst financial vultures tear public holdings asunder – Royal Mail, NHS contracts, banks, all racked like Prometheus on the altar of the stock exchange. A fair share today is to work for little return because toil itself is somehow virtuous. Today people are so inebriated by this solemn word – 'austerity', bellowed like thunder across a desert valley – that they look on their chains and somehow think them fair. Poverty is not engendered by laziness, much though the government loves to brandish such platitudes, but by a deeply warped perception of fairness which has been forced down the public gullet like some oozing bolus.

Inequality must be extinguished like the virus it is. 60% of wealth in this country is owned by 20% of people (inequalitybriefing.org). I scarcely need to support this fact with an argument – it is almost too abhorrent for words to cling to. This of course means that 80% of people own 40% of wealth – the subject of poverty is almost ludicrous to discuss before this gross injustice has been tempered. How might we look on a system which allocates the majority of wealth to a minority, and then look with dull censure when people cannot afford to eat? What is to be expected? The system is in dire need of change. The system is not idiosyncratic – it is sociopathic. It rewards the few for the toil of the many. This is the worst kind of barbarism a civilised society subjects itself to, and to support it either indicates ignorance or untrammelled malevolence.

But there is another potential solution, as proposed by Richard Buckminster Fuller, although it too is founded in the banishment of inequality. The quote is quite brilliant and so I must give it in full: 'We must do away with the absolutely specious notion that everybody has to earn a living. It is a fact today that one in ten thousand of us can make a technological breakthrough capable of supporting all the rest. The youth of today are absolutely right in recognizing this nonsense of earning a living. We keep inventing jobs because of this false idea that everybody has to be employed at some kind of drudgery because, according to Malthusian-Darwinian theory, he must justify his right to exist. So we have inspectors of inspectors and people making instruments for inspectors to inspect inspectors. The true business of people should be to go back to school and think about whatever it was they were thinking about before somebody came along and told them they had to earn a living.'

On first reading this, you may have thought, 'What tosh!' but why? We are so constrained by this inexorable capitalist system that the mere thought of dissent is deemed immediately nonsensical. Machinery is growing in its capabilities at a tremendous rate – why not publicly own all machinery, produce things for everyone, do as Buckminster Fuller suggests and let real people work fewer hours? I do not know if work will ever be eliminated, but it can be reduced, and must be if mankind is to gain even an approximation of freedom. I concede, work in the short-term confers on its bearer the freedom to survive. Yet this is the problem! We live on a quotidian basis, snatching income from day to day, and we do not see the long-term shackles. It is only when we are free enough to work fewer hours that poverty can be interred.

Then what do we say to our children? 'Spend your life in the workplace, my child, this is the path to freedom'? Such a sentiment invokes the casuistry I discussed earlier. There is the hint that work is always good, regardless of its conditions. To me, work and freedom are diametric opposites on an abstract level. I am reminded of George Bush's reply to a divorced mother of three: 'You work three jobs? Uniquely American, isn't it? I mean, that is fantastic that you're doing that.' Yes – in the short-term a huge amount of work can allay the ills of poverty, but it is incumbent on a humane society to redesign the system, that this needn't ever happen. That somebody works three jobs to survive is nothing to celebrate – it is cause for insufferable anguish. I say again, an individual who looks on such a system without utter contempt is either ignorant or maleficent. At present, poverty is a function of the system, not a terrible aberration in its progression. In the long-term, the destruction of poverty will only occur through a great lurch in the direction of our economic system. It has often been said that charity conceals and perpetuates underlying injustices, and I think the same is true of work. Full employment may be necessary to eradicate poverty in the short-term, but in the long-term this can only bring servility and mere subsistence.

Then the fact that work has burrowed into our conception of freedom is an abject tragedy. We have trudged far enough with this millstone round our necks. We have been shown a world in which, like Sisyphus, we heave a colossal weight with our every move, with no progress derived therefrom. The rich, by some obscure divine right sublimated in the concept of money, look on at the mute proletariat with incredulity, as the latter moves the former's load without protestation. This inequality inevitably leads to poverty. Yet there is a whole tract of stones out there, and a legion of indifferent machines willing to move them. It is never too late to break the chain!

Sunday 8 December 2013

On Didactic Despotism

I write this piece in the hope that I might preserve the soul, or what remains of it. Wherever I look there are fetters; whatever I touch is embosomed in a socket. This may be the most bizarre blog post I have yet written, but the mania in its construction is necessary and, besides, microcosmic.

I have suspected it for some time – but now I know it to be true! This damnable university bears one sole intendment – the destruction of the soul, the destruction of the individual. Its pestilent maws snap and grind, that rebellion might be crushed, and the soul might be truncated. Legion thoughtless forms are racked on some Ixionian instrument, wheedled with promises of future toil and debt and freedom! Freedom through enslavement! Freedom through abnegation!

Today it is enough to moil under agony to be free. Freedom is to have enough money to tend another's chains. I cannot retain my sanity in such a world! Is madness knowledge? How has the rebellious spirit become mental unhingement? Who threw the pall of lunacy over thought?

I am reminded of The Dream by Byron, and the following extract:

                                     her thoughts
Were combinations of disjointed things;
And forms impalpable and unperceived
Of others' sight familiar were to hers.
And this the world calls frenzy; but the wise
Have a far deeper madness, and the glance
Of melancholy is a fearful gift;
What is it but the telescope of truth?
Which strips the distance of its fantasies,
And brings life near in utter nakedness,
Making the cold reality too real!

And is this not utter truth? Who has experienced any meaningful epiphany in joy? Is joy not the placation of the mind? This explains a great deal in a world in which sadness is considered derangement. We must feign happiness at all times, and therein lies the problem of man's modern stultification. No progress has ever been made by an individual who is satisfied with the world. But more than this, far more – the soul cannot ever be perfected when its host is unwilling to admit its imperfections.

I sit in a lecture, and words are extruded betwixt the lecturers mandibles and lashed against the beholder. All is grey, all is artificial. Every sentence is a torment of bone. There is a real, physical pain attendant on each syllable, as if black barbs had riven the flesh. With each PowerPoint slide I feel an assault on the soul, and I check the lecturer's grim features for sadistic smirks which might affirm such a fear. Starchy, bloated faces are placed all around the room, perfectly indifferent to the world, yet awaiting the lecturer's next word with utter anxiety. There is the real possibility that the lecture might spontaneously conclude, the spell would be broken, and all the faces would collapse where they float, receding into the bland furniture.

I must take a moment to assay the absolute toxicity of such a mode of learning. One is told too frequently how university is different from school – university is where one might think for oneself. However, I have seen no evidence to confirm such an assertion. The above description of the university system, and certainly the university in which I am trapped, may seem histrionic, but I assure you, dear reader, it makes only a tiny assault on the vast edifice of evil to be found here.

Then university is a place for individual growth and discovery – let us consider this statement. First, they begin the 'experience' by assigning each student their very own student number, by which one will be referred in all sorts of official communication. Hereby, one is shown one's place as a mere number in a colossal machine. This is the root from which all dehumanisation blooms.

More than this, and in addition to countless measures designed to punish individualism, one observes a bizarre trend in this supposed 'learning'. Namely, one is absolutely not to have an opinion on any matter. One is to read others' views, absorb them and then contrast them so as to create an overview of the given topic (and this is regarding humanities subjects – sciences do not even afford this luxury). One is not assessed on the strength of one's own words, but on that of others, and how well one has sewn them together. Of course, this can be a useful skill, and is one which I use often, but the homogeneity of thought, and the humbling of the individual, promoted by such a tendency is clear. Any critique must be based on the findings of some contrary source, all censure must be filtered through another's viewpoint, reliant on the chance occurrence that someone has said previously what one wishes to say now. It is difficult to describe quite how inimical this is, but the impression is broadly as follows: One must not be so impetuous as to think one's own view is important, one must obey the established authorities on truth. Simply, it breeds timidity in the expression of opinion. Such a system cannot stimulate freedom of thought, rather it stimulates the desire for oppression I will discuss later. I have met more vacuous people at university than I could care to mention – one must remember that these are people who have followed the government's prescribed course of living for their entire spans. A preponderance of programmed robots is to be expected here.

A break is announced after the first hour. I get up, snatching my possessions with criminal ease, and run to the great palisades in the far corner, vaulting through with the energy of Satan's irruption into Eden. There are more doors ahead, and I speed up, lest they be locked before me.

'Freedom!' my mind seems to cry, as I am vomited out into linear greyness and stretching uniformity. I do feel as if I am mad at this point. Does nobody see chains? Crushed souls trudge before me, great shackles clawing the dirt where they rove.

I run to the lake or, to exercise a reluctant pedantry, the artificial lake nearby. I don't know quite why I do this, but I do it in absence of all premeditation. The thing is positioned such that the admirer of this body of water must simultaneously gaze on the buildings from which a retreat was just made – there is no escape. This whole place has been constructed as a colossal panopticon, with some industrial chimney disgorging its poisonous fumes in the centre of the wasteland. I feel like the goat in the maths problem – tied to a post, and drawn irresistibly by each movement to its dull cynosure.

I walk to a bench, wincing as the wind's brumal pangs shiver through my form. I am seated for mere moments before realising that the ducks, strewn around me like empty crisp wrappers, feel none of the woe to which I am so unnecessarily subjected. They ensconce themselves in the grass like rattlesnakes, preening their grand coats and watching. Yet how is it that these ducks, alien to the wonders of civilisation, precluded from inherited knowledge, banished from the gates of progress, are more free from fetters than I can ever hope to be? How is it that thousands of years of civilisation allows me to say that I am less free than a duck? These birds have no obligations, no exams, no places to be, and yet there is no discernible disorder among their ranks.

Civilisation, on the other hand, has spent thousands of years creating abstract boundaries and rules, such that now the personality is worthless, and the soul, once delicate and glistering, is altogether disregarded. I do not say that a return to the pure innocence of the ducks is required – this is probably impossible and, besides, such a state may be less beautiful than that of man at the summit of his potential. Yet it is only a system of benignity which will affirm this. In this damnable university I see all the vices to which civilisation has heretofore aspired, and still aspires!

And, for this reason, I do not pin the dread accusation of wickedness on university alone – it itself is in thrall to a far larger system, and must be seen as such if its malice is to be fully neutralised. All proscriptions on freedom must be seen as functions of the system which allows them, and not as regrettable anomalies. Only if we attach such importance to the upheaval of our blasted mode of living can we ever hope to apprehend even a modicum of freedom.

Rousseau saw the nocuous effects of our warped civilisation, and the neglect of the soul with all the distractions of wealth and toil. He writes, in his Discourse on the Arts and Sciences:

O virtue! Sublime science of simple souls, are so many troubles and trappings necessary for one to know you? Are your principles not engraved in all hearts, and in order to learn your laws is it not enough to go back into oneself and listen to the voice of one's conscience in the silence of the passions? There you have true philosophy.

What price the elevation of the soul when we have money, this fantastic paper! Venality rendered in a convenient form! What price personality when all is fit for sale and purchase? What price one's short span when it might be Balkanised and put to commercial use? Thousands of years of supposed progress – for what! I am more in chains, by virtue of this human form, perhaps than anything which has ever stirred on this grey sphere. But even beyond Rousseau's purview, we see today an even more pernicious form of civilisation. Slavery, as traditionally conceived, never required a worship of one's chains – yet this is what is expected of me! This makes the impossible movement from physical enslavement to mental enslavement – and here such an expectation must be laid to rest!

We must adore this mercenary system, we must be grateful we are not more comprehensively desolated. Yet this modern slavery, by its assault on our passions, by its demands of more than physical supplication, leaves no space for further desolation. Winston in 1984 is free as long as he clings to his shred of rebellion, this worm of defiance in his mind. He plans to be shot by some guard and, as the bullet was released, live only in that insurrection. Hereby he would be free. Yet today we must love the system, we must discard this scrap of rebellion. We are Winston once he has declared his undying love for Big Brother, and this is the absolute core to which all slavery aspires – a willing slavery! A slavery of the mind! Only in this can the onlooker find true despair. 

This sadism, this need for enslavement on the part of the masses, is seen in the very construction of the labour market. Nobody is much bothered by the fact that today we must entreat others to affix our chains – in this we see perfect slavery. When I read in a job application form: 'Why do you want to work for this company?' why might I not reasonably write, 'Fuck you, I need the money'? The very purpose of a wage is to compensate the worker for the aching drudgery of toil. To ask the worker his reasons for willing his own enslavement is a misunderstanding of the wage system. Nay, deeper than this, it is indicative of the wickedness of our current economic system. Today we must be fawning and servile, furnishing our prospective overlords with reasons why they might be so kind as to immure us in the workplace. We must apply for jobs, wear ridiculous suits, deign to the idiocy of the corporate tempest of bureaucracy and other such needless nonsense. Of course this occurs because today we see work as a universal duty, not a detestable material necessity. Do you notice we see unemployment as the thing to be eliminated, and not employment – humanity is absolutely desirous of its bonds; a neurotic dread of freedom hangs in every heart. The soul under such a regime is desecrated beyond hope. We talk of the failure of our education system – I can scarcely think of a system which might inculcate so much servility! 

I do not say that work itself is the desolation of the soul, but in its current configuration – whereby one must weep at the beauty of one's bonds, and smile at one's oppressor – it is. To regain the shred of freedom necessary to individual thought and the flourishing of the soul, it behoves the individual to disembarrass himself of these metaphysical shackles of approval. Nothing can be beautiful if this rebellion is absent. We must stop looking on things as unalterable, 'the way the world works', and instead seize change for ourselves. To admit that something is wicked but impossible to change is a gross dereliction of duty. I will have no more of the cheapened concept of liberty we cherish!