PyramidHead
Contributor
We all know about the Overton Window and how it sets parameters for discourse and criticism of public life. Unconsciously, cultural attitudes change (or are manipulated) and things that used to be acceptable become unheard of, or things that used to be unacceptable become normalized. This isn't a passive process, though. We're engaging in the activity that shifts the window right now. Yet, the Overton Window as a concept implies a landscape that is already defined, which is grazed upon in various places at various times by a shifting herd of public opinion. I think we're living in an era of unprecedented possibilities, but a dearth of imagination about ways of living that harness them. This has the effect of lowering the bar on what most people accept as a natural, justifiable state of affairs in society, and I believe that bar should be greatly raised.
So, if you agree, then what are the genuinely outrageous elements of modern living that are inadequately questioned, or passed over in discussion to focus instead on comparably minor concerns?
I'll start with a quote from an article by Luke Savage:
This is the kind of discontent I'm referring to. I agree with the sentiment expressed. It's obvious, simple, and routinely downplayed in favor of emphasizing the window dressing. Even if you disagree, you have to admit that the discontent is of a character one level removed from the usual dialog about specific policies, and that's the kind of wide-ranging style of thought we definitely need more of.
A perfect example of missing the problem that's right under our noses is the argument over whether a minimum wage should enable someone working 40 hours a week to afford a house, transportation, health coverage, and food. By framing the conversation as about minimum wage and the economic intricacies that underlie it, everybody forgets the more urgent question: why should the basic necessities of human social existence be dependent on a wage at all? Is there some reason why only people who work 40 hours should have access to these things? Why 40 hours? Do we all need to work 40 hours just to be productive enough to cover everybody's basic needs? This leads the conversation down a very different path, a more productive and critical one, that is too frequently ignored in my opinion. We should read the foundations of every soundbite policy debate in this way.
Some more scattershot factors for consideration (some of these I have expressed elsewhere):
ETA: I should be more clear that this thread is supposed to encourage other people to offer examples of what they regard as unacceptable-yet-strangely-accepted aspects of society, even if (especially if) they don't agree with my suggestions, which come from a libertarian communist perspective.
				
			So, if you agree, then what are the genuinely outrageous elements of modern living that are inadequately questioned, or passed over in discussion to focus instead on comparably minor concerns?
I'll start with a quote from an article by Luke Savage:
...I simply cannot fathom reconciling myself to a society where so many needlessly suffer because of circumstances beyond their control; where human dignity is distributed on the basis of luck and a social caste system is allowed to permeate every aspect of daily life; and where all of this is considered perfectly normal and acceptable in a civilization that has split the atom and sent people to the Moon.
This is the kind of discontent I'm referring to. I agree with the sentiment expressed. It's obvious, simple, and routinely downplayed in favor of emphasizing the window dressing. Even if you disagree, you have to admit that the discontent is of a character one level removed from the usual dialog about specific policies, and that's the kind of wide-ranging style of thought we definitely need more of.
A perfect example of missing the problem that's right under our noses is the argument over whether a minimum wage should enable someone working 40 hours a week to afford a house, transportation, health coverage, and food. By framing the conversation as about minimum wage and the economic intricacies that underlie it, everybody forgets the more urgent question: why should the basic necessities of human social existence be dependent on a wage at all? Is there some reason why only people who work 40 hours should have access to these things? Why 40 hours? Do we all need to work 40 hours just to be productive enough to cover everybody's basic needs? This leads the conversation down a very different path, a more productive and critical one, that is too frequently ignored in my opinion. We should read the foundations of every soundbite policy debate in this way.
Some more scattershot factors for consideration (some of these I have expressed elsewhere):
- The people who work the hardest in most professions often have the least amount of influence over the conditions of work and terms of compensation that affect them the most.
 - The police force in America is committed to enforcing the law as it is written, regardless of whether the law is just or not, and monopolizes the use of deadly force to do so.
 - National and state borders, rarely (if ever) negotiated or modified by the living occupants within them, are used as adequate grounds for almost any form of brutality against others.
 - Almost all of civilized life is dominated by the exchange of currency, and it is almost never seriously contemplated why this should continue to be the case.
 
ETA: I should be more clear that this thread is supposed to encourage other people to offer examples of what they regard as unacceptable-yet-strangely-accepted aspects of society, even if (especially if) they don't agree with my suggestions, which come from a libertarian communist perspective.
			
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