Culture vs. "Spreadsheet Economics"
One one hand, I've come to agree with a lot of folks here that "GDP" economics is a subset of culture & social economics rather than the other way around. People get jobs and consume more-so as a result of social cohesion and assumptions built on social proof than spreadsheet-style analysis, for good or bad. I might disagree with some of the conclusions on government policy in the face of this reality, but that's another issue. Accurately describing reality is hard enough. Developing a cogent policy proposal in the face of that is a whole other animal.
For a little bit, let's get out of the purely political realm of what the state should do. Deciding how to interact with your family & community's culture will prove difficult enough in this post... bringing the state into it is gonna be a mess.
But this realization that culture more at the core of our behavior than spreadsheet economics inevitably leads to the personal decision (conscious or not) of how much one should allow prevailing culture to influence them. Harry Browne's HIFFIAUW changed my muddled view on this considerably, though I think most of us realize he came down a little to hard on simply abandoning ideas of marriage, kids, and family if they're not clearly making you happy... that we shouldn't abandon the "group traps" too quickly, perhaps.
But I have trouble really nailing down how to describe "American culture," much less "Western culture." Is "football" our culture? Driving cars? Mowing lawns? Is the stuff that makes us unique from other cultures a more significant part of our culture simply because it's different!? When adhering to your cultural norms vs other culture's norms (especially ones you see as inferior (perhaps quite-rightfully)), the answer to some folks here might be clear. But that's a pretty false dichotomy. What if one could find a way to exist in our culture in the most meaningful ways possible (ones that give you the most amount of of positive human interaction with others I'd argue is the best measure), while optimizing one's own personal decisions when they see them as being in-opposition or not in adherence with our culture. I'll come back to this in part 2.
One more thing to hit on with culture... If you have kids, I've noticed from an outsider's perspective, this magnifies the dilemma considerably. I won't even go into it as I know most people here know far-better than I do all the small and large dilemmas with how to navigate your children through the cultural maze of our modern culture(s).
Self-Improvement
I'm not gonna lie... I love self-improvement. So much more than participating either passively or too enthusiastically in "culture." I see them as simultaneously in stark opposition but also not needing to be. As an unmarried (with awesome GF) kidless white male, I've found that a lot of our "culture" is just code word for "ways to interact with each other in a positive, productive way." There's been a lot of discussion about "Making America Great Again." To me, I'd amend this to "Make yourself great and spread the word." The problem is, I see making yourself great as being in very stark opposition to many aspects of American culture that seem to be the natural alternative to seeking how to be more "multi-cultural" with Muslim, Asian, Hispanic and African influences.
To me, self improvement consists of optimizing various aspects of your personal life, only part of which is enriching how you interact with your friends, family & coworkers. To me, there are so many areas of "American" or "Western" culture, if there is such a thing, that seem utterly un-optimized from the stand-point of human health and happines... hell even if it's just in-terms of how we interact with each other (which, if I'm not mistaken, is the main point of culture - improving human interactions). How does football really improve American culture? It makes you want to each cheetos and drink beer with some people and angry at others. When I want the answer to the question, "how do I make the best pork roast" or "how do I find the best strength training routine," or "how do I optimize my sleep" or "how do I adapt to the cold," or the fact that I even ask myself these questions and am willing to put real time and resources into the answers is decidedly NOT a substantial aspect of American "culture."
And from what I've found, you really don't NEED to participate in all the useless or negative aspects of any culture to interact positively with people that participate in that culture. I drive a Toyota Prius, love cooking & lifting & guitar & philosophy & the outdoors (short of having real survival skills) & shooting guns, somewhat despise consumerism, am nausiated by spectator sports in the guise of physical adaptation optimization, am nervous about the effect of chronic electronic pass-timing... so while I'm not in love with multi-culturalism, I think I just simply hate the fact that culture makes us so lazy at really examining our lives. When I see my friends sit around and eat garbage food and drink every Saturday and Sunday while watching football, and if anyone represents standard midwest "American culture," it's these guys (and they're really good dudes), then come to politics they talk about what "pussies" we've become and how feminized and over-sensitive we become, and it's the democrats and feminists and Muslims/Mexican's fault, I just want to say, "what the f*ck are you talking about."
I think I've said it before, but Muslims & Feminists aren't destroying our culture... they're having some negative effects on some aspects of society, but look at us!... X-Box, air conditioning, Cheetos and spending 14 of our 16 waking hours a day sitting on our asses are destroying us. Not your goddamn feminist professor from college or Hillary Clinton.
Simply put, while Americans are pretty cool people on a personal level, our culture sucks, IMO. If I want to look at how to positively grow myself as an individual, I'm NOT going to look at "western culture." I'm going to look at "self-imrovement culture," and that takes elements from nauturalism, evolution, eastern medicine, stoic philosophy (and some others... but stoicism has an eastern and western version), and largely trying to IGNORE so much of the noise peddled at us either overtly or covertly on a daily basis.
So the question is to me...
How do we reconcile all this for ourselves, our kids and our communities? We DO need a healthy culture to thrive, but as we focus on how BAD "those people's" culture is, how do we improve our own? Do we look backwards at our grandfathers? Do we look at the most popular aspects of American culture to distract people from multi-culturalism? How much do we either turn away or actively deride consumerism when the economic infrastructure of our societies DEPEND on said consumerism to thrive in their current state?
ALL of our "GDP"-economic activity eventually requires some person trading their money for a product or service, many of which they do not NEED. However, many of the people providing those goods/services either directly or further back in the value-add process DEPEND on that income to survive. So we can't just abandon consumption on a macro-level without creating some real negative dividends.
To me it's all hopeless on a macro-level. I can "fix" myself and still be a positive social presence for others, but I'm essentially an "economy's worst nightmare." I don't really buy much... I research the crap of what I do buy... buy in-bulk and on-sale as much as I can OR buy quality from a good meat source, etc. All the cold-adaptation and other interests I have cost me little-if-any time/money. It works great for me. I'm happier than I've ever been, and when we get into these self-improvement discussions I feel at home. But when we bounce over to more macro-discussions, I start to feel hopeless, because while "multiculturalism sucks," so does monoculturalism. American culture sucks. Why? Because culture, by it's very nature, doesn't critically examine itself... it's just "what we do because this is how we've always done it." All cultures suck because they promote lazy thinking. I guess what I'm getting at is what the hell is the "point" of all this "culture" that we lean so much on? So we get along? Fuck that!
So I guess I'm wondering how all the fine folks on this board who seem to focus a lot on self-improvement and also seem to be hung up on "saving Western culture" reconcile those two seemingly opposing thoughts.
Sorry it took me such a damn long rant to make that point.
Peace!
