Between the articulation and implementation of a goal lies
an almost impassable chasm.
We need to step back from the edge, re-think our behaviour and choose a wholly new direction. |
The journey from promise to reality is pockmarked with
disappointments, deceptions, social and economic difficulties and consequences,
both unexpected and unintended.
Intertwined with this hazardous journey from promise to fact
is the added confusion of ideologies, and although firmly believed by their
protagonists, they frequently do little to help people break free of the many
myths and fantasies that colour and confuse our lives.
The recent Federal Budget, and now the Victoria State
election, ignited near endless ideological conversation about what will and
won’t work, but rarely, if ever, are we able to judge anything without first reflecting
on its economic cost.
That is understandable, but sad in the extreme and is the
outcome of a market driven-life in which reward for effort is measured in money,
with intelligence and influence is mostly attributed to those who have excelled
in commercial life and have both burgeoning bank balances and life loaded with
consumerist goods.
Our understanding of success in a life measured only by
physical possessions and the instinct for gambling and craftiness that survival
in our embedded market system demands is wrongheaded.
Rather than being slaves to the economy, we should be
working hard for people, putting humanity first, and we are not.
Ideologues repeatedly tell us that until the economy is
repaired, as is the chorus from the present Federal Government, Australia is
not secure and cannot progress.
The latter are both subjective and beyond that are
ideologically conditional and bound-up in myths and falsehoods sold to us as
unavoidable realities.
Those “unavoidable realities” are nothing more than human
constructs – we built them and so we can be re-build them with intent and
effort equal to what it took to assemble them.
Post World War Two brought burgeoning budgets, but the arrival of the 2000s saw them fall away. |
The responsible men claim their ideological growth-driven
pragmatism will ensure a re-birth of the post Second World War halcyon days
when fossil fuels were abundant and cheap.
The game, however, has changed and never again will we see the
once commonplace surging economies and so rather than dither on the edge of the
chasm, we need to step back, re-imagine our lives and strike out in a wholly
different direction, one in which we find contentment from collaborative communities;
places where the economy again becomes a tool and a servant, rather than a
template and the master.
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