|
Bread and Circuses by Mark Davis Exclusive to STR August 25, 2006 The
superior man blames himself. The
inferior man blames others. ~ Don Shula Bread
and circuses have gotten a bad name thanks to the state.
Who or what else could possibly disparage the goodwill associated
with eating and entertainment? Of
course the source of the negative connotation is that bread and circuses
are used by politicians to buy loyalty and provide distractions from their
actions among the populace. They
are used as a political strategy to pacify the people as their society
delves further into militarism, but does that make food and entertainment
evil? Does not then the state
make all it touches evil? The
phrase was coined by Juvenal in the First Century in his Satires
lamenting the continuing slide of his former States
are created by elite to control the masses, plain and simple.
Rulers will give people what they want if they think it will keep
them in power. Most people
want food and fun. It is not
the food and fun that are bad, it is the stealing from some to give to
others that is bad. It is
people selling out their liberties for these things that are bad.
Security, retirement funds, health care, education and all the
other things that states use to appease restless citizens are not in and
of themselves bad. What is bad
for society is the state itself. When
the elite become drunk with their early successes organizing the local
society into a manageable state collective, they inevitably seek expansion
of the territory and peoples they control.
The idea of One World Government is not a new one.
But the elite today believe more than ever that they can
actually accomplish this insane goal because of modern technology.
Of course, plans of world domination never work out because 1)
there is an endless supply of competing elite who think that they are The
One True Leader and 2) most people just don’t care about the struggles
among power-crazed elite until it directly affects them.
All the education in the world will not change these two
conditions. The
idea of class struggle made popular by Marx tries to overcome the above
two conditions by way of elevating artificial egalitarian principles over
the natural order. Give Marx
credit for recognizing the corrupt nature of elite power centers
perpetuating their control for its own sake, but trying to fool Mother
Nature just won’t work. What
he did was scare the crap out of the elite into offering more than just
bread and circuses to buy loyalty with. Like farm subsidies, Social
Security, Medicare, Medicaid, public schools, public roads, etc . . .
However, Marx made the same mistake that most people do when they look at
the problem of state control: he accepted state control as a fact of life
and focused on who controls the
state. The
idea that society could be improved by killing intellectuals, stealing the
wealth of the elite, eliminating private property and putting the peasants
in control of the state is really pretty stupid if you think about it.
Destruction is not really creative, but neither is seeking world
hegemony. So for those who
truly believe that the state is just a part of life, we are all stuck
between a rock and a hard place: between Communists and Fascists.
No wonder people prefer to think about food and entertainment
instead of politics. If
your only choices are deciding who gets to run your life, then what’s
the point of making choices? The
real circus distracting people from what’s really important then isn’t
rock concerts, sporting events and movies, it’s the state itself.
Primarily the election of this or that “leader” to take us to
the Promised Land, but also endless discussion and argument over
“correct” policies, amendments, laws and who to invade next.
You have about as much chance of changing the system by being
politically active as you do influencing who wins the Super Bowl by
cheering for your favorite team: marginal at best. I
find it amusing to listen to radio talk show and television news show
entertainers bemoan the fact that people would rather watch sports or go
to a movie than listen to them pontificate about the same old crap over
and over. Their thinking goes
that if only everybody were educated (really indoctrinated) as good
Republicans, Democrats or even Libertarians, then there would be more
voters making better choices and we would all be ruled by wonderful,
selfless leaders. Uh huh,
right. Yet they all support
the biggest state circus of all: war.
State-controlled media is the circus we should avoid if we want to
be free. The
election season is upon us. It
comes every other football season. I’ll
be paying a lot more attention to the football season than the political
season, though both are hard to avoid.
The commentary of the respective media experts and pundits will
continue to borrow metaphors from each other, the teams will have big
mouths talking trash, the games will be played and the winners declared.
The Sunday morning news shows and Monday morning quarterbacks will
be all juiced up and passionate about the teams they have chosen to invest
so much attention, emotion and energy in.
The competition itself is the show because the outcomes change
nothing in real life for anybody but the competitors and the gamblers. I
especially find it amusing when Republicrat clones pontificate about the
rabble going in droves to NASCAR, NFL, NBA, MLB, The
way to decrease state power is to decrease state support.
For starters, ignore its elections, politicians, media hucksters
and sycophants. If you really
want to poke a stick in the eye of state worshipers, then go have some
chicken wings and beer watching your favorite game or show while ignoring
them. If you stop to think
about it, raise a toast to praise two things that are really good in life:
bread and circuses. Curse the
state, not its victims. Bread and circuses don’t enslave people, states do. Mark Davis is a husband, father and real estate analyst/investor enjoying the freedoms we still have in Longwood, Florida. |