Sunday, March 15, 2009

Culturist Economics

Culturism and economics intersect at several places. In fact, our culture has been very important to our economic development. And, a strong economy is important to our culture. We as a society are paying for our lack of culturist thought. Immigration and globalization are driven by multiculturalism. We must again become culturist to undo their damage.

Dropping out of school early and having several children is a formula for personal poverty. Statistics show that this is a cultural distinction of many cultures. In many cultures women are expected to do this. And, shy of that, there is no shame in it. In their home countries, such people are poor. In the first world West they lean on our social services. When you combine this fact with not having ever paid taxes, you have the perfect storm for the creation of a second or third world economy.

Welfare is cultural. All laws are culturist. Welfare only works if people are ashamed to take it. Once everyone thinks it is okay to take it, you get more people taking from the system than paying into it. Without a sense of responsibility and shame, welfare is unsustainable. Laws are culturist in that if you get rid of value judgments and encourage people to take free lunches you sap initiative and responsibility. Culture and social services are intimately intertwined.

We are now at the point where people think that handouts are a right. They do not beg with shame; they demand with all their self-worth. Notice that these attitudes towards social services result from ideas; they are cultural. One is based on Marxist thought that the rich are holding the wealth and we deserve ours. The other comes from the republican capitalist view that wealth comes from generating services or products. We need to teach about the ravages of communism and dangers of demagoguery.

Culturist problems do not only lay with the poor. The business class have taken our manufacturing industries and shipped them overseas. This reflects globalist thinking. And this, like multiculturalism, stems from an inability to realize that we have a culture, a side, to be loyal to. This, in turn, has a double effect in that the understanding of factories and how things are made is also goes overseas with the factory; the idea of starting a machine shop to make a part your factory needs disappears. Thus businessmen’s lack of attachment to our nation has undermined our economy. On this note they also do not seem to mind Sharia financing. They think they are post-modern, post-cultural beings. This is a dangerous fallacy.

Teaching American history is important to the economy. The Founding Fathers spoke often about the importance of self-reliance and the unique nature of our culture. Teaching about western civilization is important. When you do so you realize that cultivating our commitment to the individual took a long historical struggle. Businessmen need to be loyal to the West. Economics must be taught. We have forgotten that Keynesian stimulus requires local factories to be stimulated by purchases. We now are only stimulating China. And economics and history intertwine in the lessons about the evils of communism. A functioning economy requires basic cultural precepts. We need to teach our basic cultural precepts again.

A combination of multiculturalism and globalism has undermined our ability to teach about the importance of culture to an economy. Since multiculturalism teaches that all cultures are equally wonderful and businessmen have no side to be loyal to, we can no longer, as we used to, discuss the intersection of values and economics. This is dangerous. Economics undergird our being the land of opportunity. If the West falls our vision will fall with it. We are not the world. We have nowhere else to live. We are the West. Sustaining the West and its vision requires a realistic sense of responsibility towards it. It requires a sense of culturism.

www.culturism.us

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sort of OT, but I wonder what prevents certain cultures from ever breaking through poverty. Specifically, the Roma. Yesterday, I came across this report about the brewing culture/race war in Hungary. . .

Economy Breeds Racism in Hungary

March 13 | As Eastern Europe feels the full brunt of the global meltdown, they are succumbing to the ugly by-product of tough times: racism. In Hungary the gypsy population has already suffered two deaths with more predicted. The Sydney Morning Herald ‘s European Correspondent Paola Totaro and photographer Penny Bradfield gauge the mood at the Roma village of Kerepes on the outskirts of Budapest.


***
here's a video report about a recent UK episode which depicts how entrenched these squatting communities can become.
Meadowlands Traveller eviction 2004 (Pt.1)



HRW

Unknown said...

HRW,

Unfortunately, division in society gets exasperated by economic setbacks. Diversity is more dangerous in bad times than in good times! That is just a culturist fact of reality.

Still, I hope that people do not blame their woes on the poor Gypsies.

Certain cultures' values do limit economic achievement. The problem with multiculturalism is that it really thinks diversity is about food, fashion and festivals. Therefore, differences in achievement immediately get attributed to racism. Some groups being poor does not show racism.