Solving the ethical capitalism conundrum

Capitalism worked better for the low paid over a century ago. We must look to history to understand ethical commercialism and how we can solve problems and do even better now.

Yes, making such a statement is certain to raise the heckles of both those on the left who believe that they have workers’ rights completely nailed, and those on the right who think that the money-comes-easy lives that they have are an economic miracle that is shared by all.

Sat on either end of the supposed spectrum which is the political divide, those with such refined and apparently generous world views share ignorance of the laws of consequence in common. They have little if no appreciation of the effects that such self-righteousness and outright selfishness actually have.

It is little wonder that many of those who are on the arse end of all this are feeling real pain. With rights gone mad and the part they are forced to play in a cultural system that is so obsessed with monetary and material wealth, normal people have no idea what a balanced, fair and just model of society would actually look like. Just as they have no real appreciation of what good has looked like at any time before.

The painful truth that underpins the history of humanity – and particularly the two or three hundred years since the industrial age began, is that the strong have always had the ability to abuse the weak.

More often than not, they have done so.

But whereas strength was once based on physical or military strength with both the threat and action that too often followed it, the phenomenon that is the strength abused today is a money, wealth, influence and power-crazed age that only misuses physicality at the intranational level, whilst the governments themselves smile nicely at their people and bully them with the misuse and manipulation of money and ‘the markets’ instead.

Our politicians quite literally do not understand nor appreciate the role and the neglected responsibility they have for creating and continuing to evolve a world where a basic self-sustainable life without debt or help, is something that those on a weekly minimum wage simply cannot afford.

Business has also lost sight of its role in supporting not only its own employees, but the obligation it has every member of society too.

First, the focus on service and quality for customers was replaced by the obsession with profit, efficiency and the overall bottom line. Then, the dwindling value of the low amounts of money and benefits that the lowest earners were once paid were pulled back so extensively, that systems of mutual benefit that worked for both the employer and the employed have been at best completely obscured from view.

Over a Century ago, great industrialists like Cadbury and Rowntree had the sense to build homes and infrastructure to support both workers and their families.

Farms, the Police, utility services and even Council Highways provided their staff with similar (and in rare cases still do), and those who have followed such TV Dramas as Downton Abbey will recall how the staff of great houses and estates were all accommodated.

Yes, lower-paid staff may have literally lived below stairs and the wages may have seemed very low. But all of the needs of those who worked were considered as a responsibility of the employer. People worked hard, but they were also genuinely happy too, because the relationship between everyone wasn’t just about the cost or what people are being paid.

Greed, selfishness and the obsession with one-sided rights that never had their true consequences thought through, have conspired to make basic life and the ability to live happily and free, a concept that is now neither possible, nor something that anyone on a low or even average wage can afford. And that affordability is heading quickly towards the top.

The introduction of the FIAT money system that has allowed politicians and bankers to live the myth that they can just print whatever money they want, because its true value isn’t actually anchored to anything, has literally allowed cash to be fire hosed at all those who have more money and wealth that they could ever need.

Meanwhile, the increase in the amount of money available has meant that the small amounts earned and in the possession of those with less are continually being devalued. Wage rises never keep up with out-of-control inflation and we are now experiencing retail price rises that even well-paid people are struggling to afford.

The real tragedy is that few can even see the mechanics of what those who have abused their power have actually done to us all. Many of those being hurt the most, wouldn’t even believe you if you could take all the time necessary and use every too possible to show them how it all works.

There really is little or no understanding of the role that the obsession with profit at all costs has had.

For instance, the pub and hospitality industry has always required long hours, but historically paid those taking the risks and responsibility very well. It has been broadsided – not only by the government response to covid, as many publicans believe – but by an industry that is predominantly owned by profit-obsessed capitalists who have used 80’s legislation to appease the EU to take all the fat from every part of the publicans pie that is possible. A process that has often led to many who would have previously thrived as great landlords not having the financial wiggle room to operate in challenging times and therefore going broke.

It doesn’t have to be like this. For any of us. It never did.

The reason that people cannot afford to live on a basic wage and small businesses that should be thriving are closing at a rate that society can ill afford is greed and the selfishness that underpins it. Nothing more.

It doesn’t matter what value is placed on the size of the cake, which is everything in an economy combined.

If anyone is playing that system and creating value that doesn’t exist, so that they themselves can profit, or get themselves out of a problem that their gaming helped to create, it is inevitable that those who do not have that control will be hurt.

Those who are furthest away from that power and influence will always be the ones to be hit by the consequences of this deranged behaviour. It is inevitable that they will feel the pain first.

Those at the top of this system’s hierarchy are too far away from the pain that their bad decisions will cause, to be insulated from the rose-tinted view of life they have for everyone outside their spere of contact.

Exposure to real life might otherwise prevent them from believing – as they now so clearly do – that they are the new gods and can do no wrong.

We can no longer rely on trusting that the good amongst those who lead us will be able to maintain any change in standards that they might be able to impose.

It has happened before, too many times, that devices and rules installed to protect the weak and innocent from the self-serving actions of the few within public policy have been overturned or removed. Often under the watch of leaders too weak or out of touch to know or understand why they were there.

We must return power to the most local level possible.

Where power must be shared regionally, nationally or at a world level, our representatives must come from and be recognisable amongst us at the most local level.

The local level is where every politician’s real power must remain. And that power must never be given away again to people who will forever be distant from us and out of touch.

Is Russell Brand really a Conspiracy Theorist, or he just rattling the bars of gilded cages using some very uncomfortable truths?

I’m no great fan of Russell Brand. I did go to one of his gigs in Birmingham about 15 years ago and quickly realised that his material, back then, was very much all about him.

The content has certainly changed today. But he’s still ridiculously grandiloquent and speaks just a little bit quickly. However, he certainly shines the spotlight in a very different direction, and in a very different way too.

The point for me at least, is you don’t have to like someone, find them entertaining, or even agree with them on everything – when they are speaking messages that we arguably all need to hear. Especially so, when it has become alarmingly clear that not nearly enough of us have already heard them before.

Russell has been getting a hammering from members of the establishment media that include a number of those names and voices that used to champion his words, attitude and approach, from the so-called progressive left.

His move away from socialist-based revolutionism and all the things that go with it, to calling out the manipulation, controlling behaviour and corruption within the media – particularly in the United States – has met with derision and the apparently timely classification of being a Conspiracy Theorist, then being added to the pool of such well-known alumni as David Icke.

The difference is of course striking to anyone with ears to listen. For instance, Icke has been notorious for destroying the value of any sensible part of his proposals and arguments, just through suggestion that the elites are all, or are led by lizards who either shape-shift, or are better than Madam Tussauds at creating their disguise.

Meanwhile, Russell has well over a 6-Million subscriber following to his YouTube Channel alone – and that doesn’t include the many viewers like I am, who regularly dip a toe into programming like his, but don’t sign up to any channel that will either group us in or make our presence publicly known.

In a world where many using social media and the internet have committed themselves to the fallacy that whoever has the most followers, likes and shares has already won, it would be very easy to right off journalistic spite as jealousy from writers and pundits who could only dream of achieving such numbers – all without having the self-awareness to at least study the real reasons for the comparative result.

Regrettably, the genuine reasons for this bad blood are more deeply ingrained and in this sense, perhaps just a little more sinister.

For like most of the problems we are facing, that the media and establishment do everything they can to avoid today, there is a lot more than just a small dollop of human nature involved in the cause.

Those who have most to lose from change will always be the last to embrace it.

So when it comes to the collapse of a system that values money, wealth, power and influence above all things, the reality we all face is that those who are fully invested in what this dying way of life continues to give them, will use and abuse the platforms they have to discredit anyone or anything that contradicts or could be seen as being a threat to everything they value continuing in any way.

Russell Brand certainly isn’t right about everything. But whilst it certainly appears that the remnants of some messiah complex still exist, he does at least now have the humility to admit that he still has much to learn, and that no matter our respective views, we all need to relearn how to discuss problems like adults, whilst bearing in mind that we are all in exactly the same room.

Sadly and most regrettably for us all, those who remain in power and positions of influence to not recognise the power in such values.

They will continue to attack and destroy those who they see as being against them and maintain that they are both in control and right about everything, until the very moment that they finally realise that they are not.

Change is in the air, there is so little anyone can trust and many feel paranoid. But it’s what people choose to believe and trust now that will define what happens next

I’ve spoken before about how it feels to be sat watching those who are still invested in the normality of the chaos that the establishment is fueling. I have also observed the many who are ‘awakening’, scrabbling about, desperately trying to make sense of things that no sensible person can really make any logical sense of, falling into the arms of conspiracy theorists or false prophets with big social media followings, as these sources offer the only answers they can find.

People are understandably very prickly about everything that is going on. Not least of all because it feels like we have entered a new age of intolerance.

It is here, that for many, the only truth they will believe is their own and it makes them unequivocally right. Anyone or any idea that is different to what they believe, is therefore absolutely wrong.

However, being prickly or falling into well-intentioned conspiracy theory traps, isn’t the biggest problem that the increasing number of people who know that the establishment doesn’t work in their best interests now face.

The real problem for us all is there is no alternative that this growing and sizable part of the population can trust or has credibility enough to believe in.

Meanwhile, in every direction, we look upon the arriving storm clouds and the turbulent world that lies ahead.

People in this ‘outside of the mainstream’ group – which is only outside because the mainstream media narrative tells us that it is – are feeling paranoid for a very simple reason: We were all brought up or conditioned to believe that the establishment and anyone who represents it can be trusted and that they would always have our best interests at heart.

So, when the moment comes that any one of us realises that isn’t the case, our whole understanding of the way the world works and the framework for life it is based upon begins to fall apart.

People are quite literally becoming so fearful and untrusting of so much that they read, hear and now see, that they are becoming paranoid about everything that is going on.

Sadly, of the many speakers and ‘influencers’ with platforms who are out there pursuing new public agendas which are most often all about their own interpretation of what is happening and therefore what they believe will be for the best, few – indeed, if any at all, are doing anything proactive or constructive to help, guide and support this growing audience.

People are desperate for leadership that is real, that comes from people who are actually able and equipped to lead.

Instead, these ‘public voices’ are doubling down with stories that do nothing more than consolidate the existing fears with ‘I told you so’s’, rather than presenting anything positive or being based on a direction of travel that will yield genuine change and outcomes that will be good and beneficial for everyone.

It is regrettably clear that very few of the people who have the opportunity to be leading change of the kind that might result in real change using the measured, considered and proactive steps that must be taken, are doing any of the things that they could or now should be.

People don’t need yet another alternative to all that is happening already that will simply result in more of the same things.

We already have an entire political culture, filled up with people who are motivated by self-interest, and resistant to doing anything on behalf of the people who elect them, if it has even the remotest likelihood of putting their role, advancement, power, influence or anticipated future at risk.

Anyone championing or prioritising a specific group, cause or political ideology – as the solution or the way to solve the problems we face, is working for nobody other than themselves – no matter how credible or trustworthy they may appear or sound to be.

The solution to everything that is hurting people, devaluing people, creating inequality of any kind or driving the wedges that divide us all deeper and more deeply every day, can only begin and can only be successfully established by casting any form of ego or ‘my idea is the one that will save us’ kind of thinking aside.

In this sense, the ‘my DNA is in tact’, ‘they are all sheep’ and the ‘we will punish them for their ignorance’ mentality is just as damaging and out of place as those who worship wealth and money, that look down on everyone else, or who are happy with the idea of digitally enslaving the majority of the population, if it will maintain their position through removing our ability to think and keeping us all controlled.

The future is not about identifying others or ourselves as being the next ‘leaders’ in the sense of ‘top-down’ hierarchies and all that we already have that is so damaging to all of us and to humanity now.

Our future is about everyone being valued. Everyone’s experience being valued. Each person’s input being valued. So that we all play our part as a leader, but likewise feel neither any obligation nor any obstruction at any time, to speaking, to doing more or getting directly involved, as we meet the challenges of the Great Reset that greed and self interest combined to create, and we come together to define our own place in the new world that we must build that lies beyond.

The people who will be leading us in perhaps just a few months time may not already be publicly known.

It will not be any form of discrimination – legal, sanctioned or otherwise – that this dying establishment has created and seeks to impose upon us all, that will be used to decide who they are.

People must be helped to remember and to find value in who they as individuals really are.

People have the right to believe and to trust in themselves before they are asked to believe or trust in anyone or in anything else.

Real, meaningful change can only be achieved by the creation of local forums. Gatherings of real people meeting face to face, that encourage the exchange of ideas, offering the freedom to debate, without fear of consequence, and with a willingness on the part of all to embrace openness and learn from the experiences of others in a respectful way.

All this must happen without those who participate allowing either themselves or anyone with a loud or apparently credible voice to monopolise everything and pay lip service to this genuine opportunity for real democracy, by pushing their own ideas and telling everyone else that it was their choice.

The voice of the most vulnerable must carry the same value of those who have presence or voice that shouts loudest.

Grassroots Up is the only way that real democracy can be restored, that people furthest from decision making will be as involved and as valued as those making them. It is the only way that the opportunities we all need to improve life for everyone will come to exist.