Search This Blog

CCE in brief

My photo
Recovering backpacker, Cornwallite at heart, political enthusiast, catalyst, writer, husband, father, community volunteer, unabashedly proud Canadian. Every hyperlink connects to something related directly or thematically to that which is highlighted.

Monday, 1 June 2015

Cutbacks and the Burning Platform


Embedded image permalink



This is the basic premise of laissez-faire capitalism - that social safety nets encumber people, hold them back from developing the toughness, the hustle, the skills they need to become economically competitive.  When everyone is competing for jobs, contracts, resources and whatnot, what you get is the best of the best.  Period.

It's the social equivalent to natural selection - the weak or maladapted die off, leaving only successful specimens behind.  Except, of course, laissez-faire doesn't take that last into consideration.  For some reason, the most ardent capitalists don't talk about that part much.

Their thinking (or their spin) is exactly what "edgy insights" says - those who are suffering a critical lack of work, food, security and basic infrastructure are blessed, really, with the opportunity to be innovative, to create new solutions and will be compelled to sell hard to make some coin and change their lot in life.

That's how it works, right?  Those with resources - massive corporations, VC, the collective consumer - don't have to design or innovate anything.  They do not sow.  They don't have to collaborate with or empower or even inform, unless compiled to by great marketing and pitches, to do anything other than decide where to put their dollars.

The haves only dole out jobs, or contracts, or funds to those who convince them to.  The have-nots have to fight, hustle and best competition to get access to resources.  Same for firms - you can buy the innovative ones, which is so much cheaper than innovating yourself.

It's an easy frame without any messy complications.  

Except that isn't how natural selection works; innovation isn't consciously developed and marketed, it happens organically and biologically.  If anything, the more resource-hungry a group is (whether it's political parties or private companies) the more combative they become.  

How do you get to the top of the resource ladder in any laissez-faire system, be it a tribe of gorillas or a political organization?  Not through innovation, but by taking out the guy above you.

Here's what history teaches us - a reduction in service and resource access doesn't result in innovation, it results in violence.  It's the shrinking waterhole scenario.

Some other things to consider:


If you're "ethnic" you have to struggle even harder to get ahead.  That's before you get into postal code stigma, racial carding, etc.


Successful people constantly promote the concept of the quick win, the low-hanging fruit/  Get something fast, demonstrate success, then get the next one, and the next one.

If something or someone doesn't look to offer a short-term Return on Investment (ROI), you don't bother with it.  Which is why the have-nots must provide massive value-add from the get-go if they want some of the resources held by the haves.

Or, you could create a quick-win scam that not only has a greater chance of ROI with less creative investment, but also makes you feel like someone's beneath you on the social ladder.  Or you could steal, smuggle, join a gang.  These are all quick-wins and often not that dissimilar from what the successful people do.

Is there much difference between a political fundraising campaign using scare tactics or empty promises in exchange for money vs. the guy promising to fix your heating ducts for a surprising low cost?

The other option, of course, is to loose everything, become homeless and sleep on the street.  

In both scenarios, the weak don't die off - they move onto the streets creating crime risks, spreading illness, etc.  In every place in the world I've been to where laissez-faire is truly practised, the wealthy live behind gated walls topped by iron spikes or crushed glass.  Heavily armed guards must be present wherever money is exchanged in quantity.  Street scams, pick-pocketing and muggings are common.  

That's before you get into organized crime.  

Places like Columbia have gotten out of their holes by increasing, not decreasing capacity for society's most marginalized.  So of course the champions of laissez-faire want to do the opposite, because they make their own reality, doncha know.

So by all means, people cutting resource access to those below them while maintaining or increasing their own, do your thing.  Grab for your low-hanging fruit and buy into your own messaging.

Just don't dare tell us no one ever warned you about the consequences.

After all, there's no room in this world for whiners.




Sunday, 31 May 2015

Kyber Crystals and Armageddon Weapons


This episode of The Clone Wars cartoon is an original story that fits perfectly within the Star Wars Universe.  It just happens to resemble the third act of the first screenplay I wrote for my own sci-fi epic (first draft, 1998, most recent in 2013).

More proof good ideas will keep coming up - and that an idea on paper is only worth the cost of the paper it's written on.




FADE IN:
EXT.  THE VAST EMPTINESS OF SPACE
Stars shine like a billion candles, flickering in the absolute darkness. 
                     NARRATOR (VO)
                      (a haunting, female voice)
At the edge of space lies a desolate galaxy,
only on the edge of which can life be found. 

                CUT TO:
EXT.  SPACE
We see a green planet, a fragile sanctuary in the inky depths.  A shooting star falls towards its surface. 
CUT TO:
EXT.  SURFACE OF PLANET – DAY
Gentle rain falls on a limestone plain, broken by time and flora.  A river cuts through the terrain, carrying the drops of rain towards a distant ocean.

We see primitive mammalian bipeds hunt a creature akin to an ankylosaurus.  The scene feels like our palaeolithic age, but is definitely happening on an alien world.

                     NARRATOR (VO – cont’d)
On many planets life thrived, adapted, and spread.  In turn,it gave birth to knowledge, civilization and the desire to control.

We overtake the hunting scene and pass over a grassy knoll, crossing 15 millennia into the future.

Before us lies a coastal metropolis, as New York may look centuries from now.  Small craft buzz around the city’s spires.  Beyond, a vast ocean stretches to the horizon.  Waves crash gently against the shore.

One shuttle heads towards the sky, and again into the future.  We continue upwards, past the shuttle and through gathering storm cloud

                     NARRATOR (VO – cont’d)
                      (over following scene)
Some life forms would reach the stars, and there encounter others; great kingdoms were formed.  All were conquered by the Grand Emperor Shushong’deh, and merged into one vast empire.

Beyond the clouds, beyond the penumbra of the atmosphere’s rim, the sky fades to indigo, then black.  Stars wink in one by one until the heavens are filled with the shimmer of distant light.
A long, bulky spaceship rumbles into view.

                        NARRATOR (VO – cont’d)
Upon Shushon’deh’s passing, his sons battled each other for control; the empire collapsed.

The ship passes close by; it is a warship, heavily armoured, with weapons bristling along its hull.

                     NARRATOR (VO – cont’d)
Factions were formed, alliances made and broken – the Era of the Warring States had begun.

We follow the war-craft into a terrible battle in the depths of space.
CUT TO:
EXT.  SPACE – MONTAGE OF BATTLE
Stretching into the distance, ships of widely different designs and sizes assault each other. 

Amidst the chaos, one massive Capital Ship fires on another.  Squadrons of small fighters swarm like bees, taking shots at their rivals, at the hulls of other warships.  Two massive battleships pass at close range, blast holes in each other’s hulls.  In this conflict, there are no winners.

All sound is muted by the vacuum of space. 

                     NARRATOR (VO – cont’d)
For two thousand years, the battles raged.

An ARMAGEDDON SHIP, more imposing and sinister than any we’ve seen, pierces frame.  The bow of the ship is dominated by the barrel of its terrible Weapon.

The vessel fires a powerful beam which tears through a Capital Ship like a pen through paper.  The whole ship explodes from the fissure outwards.  The blast dissipates quickly in the vacuum.

                     NARRATOR (VO – cont’d)
Terrible weapons of destruction were unleashed; whole worlds were laid to waste.  The factions realized that if they could not find peace, all they had fought for would be lost.

The detritus of battle floats in space.  In the background, the battle rages on.  The images freezes, flattens as we


DISSOLVE TO: