by Dr. Mathew Maavak
November 16, 2023
from
GlobalResearch Website
Dr. Mathew Maavak,
who researches systems science, global risks,
geopolitics, strategic foresight, governance and Artificial
Intelligence. He is a frequent contributor to Global Research.
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Image
from SHTFplan.com
Is the proliferation of
poor quality products, services and talent
part of a creative destruction process
under the New Normal...
leading to universal surveillance?
"They don't make them like they used to anymore",
...is an ancient
lament that has resonated through the ages in various forms.
It
applies both to humans and their material outputs.
The Greek
philosopher
Socrates had this to say of the youths of his day (circa
470 BC):
"Children; they have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show
disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise.
They no
longer rise when elders enter the room, they contradict their
parents and tyrannize their teachers.
Children are now tyrants."
Juvenile absolutists can indeed become thorns in the societal flesh.
Think of the routine
theatrics of a young
Scandinavian
"environmentalist" who is on a mission to
'save humanity'...? Hobnobbing
with leaders who wage "eco-friendly" wars seems to be part of that
salvation process...!
The prophet
Isaiah, who preceded Socrates by three centuries, summed
up this absurdity very well (Isaiah 3:12):
My people - children are their oppressors, and women rule over them.
O my people, your guides mislead you and they have swallowed up the
course of your paths".
(Note: Only in a
mad juvenile world can women
and girls be
violated by males claiming to be otherwise in
designated bathrooms...!)
So,
are we living in an era where humanity is being led along a
tragic "course in their paths"?
How are our median economic, environmental, geopolitical, societal
and technological conditions faring?
An argument can be made that the malaise is systemic and global.
Technology, in particular, is universally gauged by the quality of
products but these now generate a daily tsunami of scathing reviews
and
complaints.
Household products and popular gadgets are becoming more fragile and
less durable by the day in spite of their "energy efficiency" and
"eco-friendly" stamps.
Much like the
manufactured stalwarts
of Gens X, Y and Z, more money
seems to be spent on PR blitzes than on quality control.
In fact, product regression was part of a plan first articulated in
1932 by American real estate broker
Bernard London.
In a
paper
titled
Ending the Depression Through Planned Obsolescence, London
began his pro-corporate spiel by paraphrasing the notorious Thomas
Malthus, who, in 1798 foresaw a future Hobson's Choice between
population growth and food production.
London's paper was published at the height of
the Great Depression,
when the vast majority of consumers had lost their spending power.
As a result, the shelf-lives of consumer items were being extended
via ingenious means.
London however viewed that as a cardinal
obstacle to progress.
In his rather meandering tract, London complained that,
"people everywhere are today disobeying the
law of obsolescence…
They are using their old cars, their
old tires, their old radios and
their old clothing much longer than statisticians had expected on
the basis of earlier experience."
Quality surplus products, including buffer food stocks in granaries,
were making,
"new production unattractive and unprofitable".
He
omitted to mention that the population surge of the 1930s would have
resolved this imbalance if not for the mass impoverishment caused by
runaway Wall Street greed...
Just when did the production of
durable
products become a socioeconomic problem?
We see this sinister logic being repeated nearly a century later
under different pretexts.
The
European Union
and
Britain, for
example, have pledged to ban new diesel and petrol cars from 2035
onwards.
This climate-linked policy has also resulted in
senseless campaigns
against
livestock and
vegetation.
London's solutions also appear to foreshadow
the Great Reset:
"I would have the Government assign a lease of life to shoes and
homes and machines, to all products of manufacture, mining and
agriculture, when they are first created, and they would be sold and
used within the term of their existence definitely known by the
consumer.
After the allotted time had expired, these things would be
legally "dead" and would be controlled by the duly appointed
governmental agency and destroyed if there is widespread
unemployment.
New products would constantly be pouring forth from
the factories and marketplaces, to take the place of the obsolete,
and the wheels of industry would be kept going and employment
regularized and assured for the masses."
Source
It gets worse...
London urged that,
"taxes should be levied on the
people who are retarding progress"...
Ergo,
the world needs to punish individuals who conserve resources
for the sake of corporations which generate disposable junk on an
industrial scale,
straining
our natural environments in the process.
And just,
how do you tax people over clothes and shoes that come with
an officially-mandated expiry date?
Will electronic micro-sensors be embedded into products of the
future?
Likewise, will humans be cattle-tagged with similar sensors
to ensure consumerist compliance and the profitability of
corporations?
Such a universally panoptic regime is no longer a far-fetched
prospect.
According to the
Kenyan Post, the
Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation (BMGF) has just inked a deal with the Kenyan government
on the roll out of a third-generation Digital Identification
Document (ID) system dubbed Maisha Namba.
The ID will be,
"assigned to every Kenyan at birth, and will be used
from birth to death".
If details of this deal appear scant, it is
because "most of the engagements" between
Bill Gates and the Kenyan
government have been "shrouded in secrecy", as the Post noted.
How
this squares up with the BMGF's decade-old
commitment to the
International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) is an open
question.
But it gets worse.
Bill Gates, along with the
United Nations
Development Program (UNDP), has announced plans to roll out "digital
IDs" worldwide by the year 2030, and they will be mandatory for
people who wish to participate in society, say
Reclaim the Net, who
advocate for free speech and individual liberty online.
Talk about
the Mark of the Beast being unveiled out in the open...!
This is the
"New
Normal" of the
World Economic Forum (WEF); one which
effectively plots and determines the "course of your paths" as
foretold by Isaiah.
Furthermore, the
WEF's mantra of,
"you will own nothing and be happy"
by 2030 is only six years away...
Yet nothing concrete has appeared
from Davos' utopian gumbo of,
...and an assorted
mélange of similar
buzzwords.
Where are the building blocks of this transformative global shift?
Except for reductionist catchphrases and patently
anti-human pronouncements, one would be hard-pressed to even detect the first
scaffolds of the post-2030 global construct.
But like London who avoided fingering Wall Street for the manifold
failures of his generation - which inevitably led to WWII and
hundreds of millions dead - our unelected global technocracy is
blaming our current planetary failings on everyone but themselves.
And they can get away with these travesties as humans are becoming
as fragile and as
obsolete as the products they consume.
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