Friday, October 1, 2021

 E Pluribus Meum

We went to Costco this week to pick up some things - Costco has upped their game with great fresh fish (like Steelhead) and Prime beef and even great veggies and fruit and they still have monster proportions of many good products.   Plus we wanted to get toilet paper and paper towels.   Evidently, after a local news story claimed paper products were under pressure, the hoarders descended  and cleaned out every Costco in the area.   The story also mentioned  that water was facing a run and indeed we encountered a woman with a basket full of about 10 40 bottle packs of water.

We seem to have lost sight of one of our founding principles - E Pluribus Unum - which is based on the idea that we have some common principles that bring us together.   I am not a complete pessimist on this problem - there are counter examples.   But the trend line based on the amount of me first, is troubling.

The same afternoon, while Quinlan was going to pick up a prescription, she found that booster shots were available, so she got hers. No line.  By the time she got home and got me back there a substantial line had formed.  But she dragged me back and  I had to stand in line for almost an hour.   The line was convivial.   Each of us waiting patiently (no pun here!) to get the third stab.  One lady ahead of us was much older than we and a couple of people found her a chair while she waited.  So in spite of our Costco experience we got some hope from the booster line.  I began to think about what has caused this seeming increase in selfishness.  I came up with three possible types of people who might be likely to be ignoring our interrelationships  - (these are presented in no order) ....

1) Those who immigrated to this country from despotic regimes.  This is not a statement about immigrants - the American tradition of welcoming people who want to join us is a good one.   We benefit from their contributions.   But those who have had to live under totalitarian regimes understand the absolute irrationality of them and they have had more experience negotiating with scarcity.  One of my favorite movies is Robin Williams’ Moscow on the Hudson.   It tells the story of a Russian circus performer who before he defects at Bloomingdales is forced to wait in line for everything - he accepts a pair of shoes which don't fit because that is the size they have. He can trade the ill fitting shoes for some other favor.   Before he defects he celebrates with his family because he was able to stand in line for toilet paper.   When Paul Mazurzky wrote the script I am sure he did not think that snip would become prophetic almost 40 years in the future.   When the circus performer defects to the US he is confronted with the range of choices and a lack of lines.   At first he dislikes all those choices.  But he soon learns that with freedom comes sometimes daunting choices.

But again there is some reason for hope - in the University board I chaired for seven years we heard from a student.  He was a physician from Venezuela and told a compelling story of his flight from his country.  He did not have a  chance to "pursue happiness" in his own country as totalitarians destroyed a vibrant economy.  So he came to the US.  Even though he  could not get his transcripts from his home university and is now working on a degree as a Nurse Practitioner.   That kind of initiative is something we should celebrate!

2) Those sucked into entitlements.  Entitlements are those programs where eligibility is not limited - you get the benefit often without a demonstration of need.  Student loans are a good example of the risks of entitlements.   Students who need to borrow (or want to borrow) for their education can use a number of programs which provide subsidized rates and terms.   In this case, when the Obama administration took over the programs (which previously had private sector participation), and transformed loans into a program run by the Department of Education - the number of loans grew substantially and concurrently so did defaults.   (Reminds me of a saying in one of my favorite saloons in Stockton - they had a sign that said "We have an agreement with the bank, they don't sell beer and we don't cash checks.")  The feds proved incompetent at running the program and defaults soared.   The revision in the program was foolhardy  - in recent years there has been a clamor that a student can borrow money, default on the loan and then have it forgiven.   That creates some truly perverse incentives.   If you are entitled to one set of things - why not everything?   A few years ago at the Democratic National Convention we heard the story of a cartoon character who derived all her benefits in life from the support she derived from government.   For me at least that was a bizarre picture contrary to things which made the country great.  

 Let me offer another entitlement that is closer to me.  The Social Security Trust Fund will go bankrupt as the number of recipients is rising and the number of tax payers paying into the fund is diminishing.  The fix is pretty simple.   In 1983, some very modest adjustments to the age of retirement and the tax base, funded the program for almost 40 years.   That could be done again - but the Senior Meums think as long as they get their check they don't need to worry about the next generation.

3) Heavy consumers of social media.  When I first got back to San Miguel in March of 2020 I went to my doctor and asked him what I should do special - being a recently cleared cancer patient.  He offered all the normal things about masks and distance and hand washing but then suggested the most important health devotion was to "avoid social media."   That was good advice.   The old story of Chicken Little is one that anticipated the bizarre range of opinions that came out on Covid.   Who the hell thought that a highlight of social conversation would be about “spittle distance?”   Moral certitude and virtue signaling have been substituted for common sense.

Clearly, the threat of COVID is real.  But in reality the constant “if it bleeds it leads” for both social media and cable news has diminished our ability to separate the real horribles from the imagined ones.

What concerns me is that we’ve seen a huge increase in a perspective which does not serve us well.  

So what are the consequences of moving from Unum to Meum?

The Meum world is very close to what Hobbes described in his description of life as "cruel, brutish and short."   The Meums look at the world as a zero sum game - if you get something I am deprived of it - so there is every incentive to get mine NOW.  In my mind, positive sum games are closer to reality.   If that is the case we should think about ways to devise methods where if each of us contributes a bit we are all a lot better off.   Cass Sunnstein and Richard Thaler wrote a book called Nudge which tried to tease out the implications of this type of thinking.

If we do not turn back from Meum, we will be following a sad path divided into warring tribes with an increasingly narrow range of choices.  That seems both sad and stupid.

Update on the book ----- This week my editor got me a final draft to work on.  My next step is to get a copy editor to clean up the draft and then to get the final to a publisher.  I've also retained a design editor to make the manuscript fit into the constraints of publishing.   The good news is that almost anything that traditional publishers once did can be done in the DIY world with very seasoned professionals.  I spent some time this week on Reedsy - which is a great site which has tons of resources for authors.   I attended (ZOOM) a seminar to learn about the range of alternatives to print and distribute books.   There are some exciting options from Amazon and Apple Books - to Ingram Spark - which actually can print on demand AND can help new authors distribute their work.  Like other parts of the economy the web has forced a very hierarchical business model to change.  That has democratized the process of creating a book.  The complexity for me is that to be effective I need to tread through these elements to get to where I want to go.   I hope to have a copy editor identified in the next couple of weeks; have my final edits to that person after that and then get this project into production.   One of the best pieces of news I got from the Reedsy Zoom meeting (led by an author who has done traditional and DIY publishing) is that the DIY world, once you understand the elements is much quicker.   The Author had a  book which went to his traditional publisher at the beginning of September and expected to go into print in Q3 of 2022 and his DIY book should be in bookstores and on the web by the end of November.   That is quite a difference.


3 comments:

  1. For some reason this post has generated a lot of comments, including one which corrected my Latin (to E Pluribus me - not sure I accept that but the writer is a good Latin scholar!) Another from a friend in Aguascalientes who said "Thank you Jon, very interesting experiences: "counter examples", it made me remember that the "Our Father" prayer, is prayed in plural, from "us". We ask together for all of us. We do not understand well that our wellness depends on the other's wellness." Another from a friend who is a college president who confirmed the trend on college campuses where now parents will call the president to fix a very minor dispute for their little darlings. And finally one friend in California who said he thought he should see Moscow on the Hudson - I concur. Thanks for the comments.

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  2. Miguel, in his second sermon tomorrow, has some churlish things to say (in Spanish) about individualism. I pre-read his sermon and determined not to contest some of his ideas, certainly regarding individualism...but I was made aware of how I cherish that notion. My parents certainly drilled it into me, though not always with the results they perhaps anticipated.
    Today on NPR I heard someone say "The opposite of adversarial positions is not unity, but collaboration." I rather liked that. Perhaps, if we cannot quite forgo individualism not adverserial stances, we might agree on useful mutual collaboration.
    Look forward to seeing you back in SMA amigo.
    George+

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  3. Mary Parker Follett who was an administrative theorist a hundred years ago described a negotiating stance as "power with" rather than "power over" - The Spanish here is a bit daunting - I believe there is a difference between some kinds of individualism and others. The Meums are not individualists - they seek us versus them.

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