Monday 17 March 2014

Resource fields, Sovereign Territory & Why oppression breeds Artistry (and other stories for children between 6 and 600)

Across all productive fields, humanity engages itself with two connected forces of nature: resource, and its worker. The worker works the resource and aligns it through various processes until it becomes a product which, should the process be successful, be of 'greater' value than the resource as it was.

[I say 'greater' with fingery quotations out of respect to mathematics. As 'maticians may inform you nothing ever changes its value by being a whole rather than the sum of its parts. 1,5 + 1,5 = 3, but 3 isn't greater for being a whole number. Nor does the invested process (+) somehow raise the value of 1,5 and 1,5. When I say it is of greater value, I mean it in the sense that it is organised more efficiently. More efficiently for what? For use as a resource in a secondary process.]

Career is in essence a declaration of resource. Doctors doctor flesh in order to reshape it into a more effective format. In a similar fashion engineers engineer wood and steel to shape machines. These are two examples of shapers of physical resource, the primary field of science.

But careers are not restricted to the sciences. Politics, while adhering to laws as science does, is not described as a species of shaping something humans see as a natural resource. Namely, it shapes humans. In particular, it shapes human resources by harmonising their emotive sentiments. The atypical, functional politician acts as a medium through which resources travel, redistributing them to the places they need be to have the most impact for production. The clearest example of shifting human resources is the Industrial Revolution, during which humans deterritorialised (converted their wealth from the resource of land to the resource of labour) and moved to monolithic cities where they had the best resources to work with. The other aspect of this industry is not in moving people to resources, but resources to people. In the same revolution, physical resources were moved from points of natural occurrence to centralised storage where complimentary components with no geographical synergy could at last react.
The trouble with this second kind of transportation (physical resource to human resource) is that if at any point during the transfer the resource stops moving, it falls into the hands of the politician. Another way to look at this is to picture government as an ocean. In its most high-functioning state, it exists solely as a medium for transport, declared international and outside of the control of any single ruler. Should anyone lay claim to any part of these international waters, they also assume ownership of any cargo ships moving through them, and all cargo aboard. Should they believe it necessary, they can seize said cargo as an asset of their rule and redirect it as they see fit. This could not happen if the state did not make a sovereign location out of what should have been a free territory. While larger organisations (political parties) often seek to dominate the movement of resources, smaller ones (corporations and businesses) operate as free merchants through the same ocean of government, organizing their operations by a different code of conduct (sadly often still restricted by sovereign law). In a lot of ways corporations are smaller, individualised governments, kept in power by the success with which they perform the task of managing production. This distinction is initially rejected on the terms that our government is viewed as our employee: we pay them a sum of money to provide us with a service, whereas being part of a corporation means consumers pay us a sum of money for providing them with a service. However if a corporation holds a monopoly over a market, it means that they will at some point have to sell that service to their own employees. If, for example, X became the sole producer of food, its employees would still pay X a certain amount every month to survive. This is no different from taxation. Income tax is an effective means of making citizens of a country its employees, because the country then benefits from whatever form of labour that citizen undertakes. As far as getting wages in return from the government, our corporate employers, I can only assume that it must cost an overwhelming amount to pay for the services I get from them, so much so that there is a deficit on my salary at the end of the month, and in everyone else's. Our only wages are cleverly disguised as untouched income, a part share in the product of labouring in the country’s interest.
In these purely economic terms, a politician could still be seen as a shaper of physical reality, because the corporate president still relies solely on the production of tangibles as proof of their competence. The other kind of politician - the dangerous one - is the one who sells human sentiment rather than actual organisation. The resource they try to shape is an intangible: faith in the ability to deliver on promises, the charisma to convince others of integrity without evidence of it, a suspension of reality in the idea that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, rather than exactly equal to it and damaged by each negative integer.
In principle, the vote is a good idea. Modern democracy relies on the notion that every human being should have a say in who runs their corporation - they each hold an equal share of stock in the company. But beyond that, we still face the terrible limitation of existing within the jurisdiction of a corporate monopoly. All we really vote on is a merger that shuffles around the country’s management divisions. In a true democracy, we should be able to sell our shares and invest in whatever company/country we believe will pay us the most and provide us with the greatest benefit package. We should even be able to start our own companies, with our own constitution for interactions between its members.  Federations are one step towards this, in the same sense that one step south brings you closer to Antarctica. As far as that kind of democracy goes, should you choose to leave the country, you don't even get as much as a severance package. What's more with countries still existing as land-based territories – something we realised was ineffective since the Industrial Revolution – the prospect of founding a new enterprise is lost to the prospect of either violent revolution or squatting on a lonely sandbar.
In short, politics sucks.

The third kind of worker is the technician. The technician is a very basic kind of worker who isn't held in the same inventive sphere as other workers - they are the hands of nations. Many of them are very talented - they devote the whole of their understanding to a single resource, be it a form of software, a mechanical device or a tool such as a spade or a pickaxe. Sometimes the line between the technician and the inventor blurs, particularly when there is the way to improve the use of a resource that others haven't considered by being too far removed from the link in the chain of production. Other technicians are bad technicians, because they assume that a flaw in the resource denotes a flaw in reality - particularly regarding software. Through intimate contact with binary logic, they assume binary logic constitutes of all logic, and they see what is on their screen as true physical reality rather than a representation of a narrow set of variables in regard to a specific problem. The bad technician is the one who mails an invoice costing $10 in postage to demand an outstanding $2 from a client. The bad technician is the one who looks at two conflicting reports and insists one is true arbitrarily because it came from 'their' system, like when a banking notification says that a sum of money has come through from a client and that same client is blacklisted later for not paying money into that account. Pure AlphaVille.
Technicians are dangerous because they lose touch with the world outside of their particular resource, and ultimately struggle to interact with it. This is very possibly true of all workers operating in broader spheres. The scientist often cannot understand the differently-ordered mind of the artist, and the artist cannot accept the 'consensus makes true' attitude of the politician. Technicians are very plentiful in the world, and are narrowed the most through their restriction to singular resources. They are the most likely to be encountered, and the most likely to annoy people. Now you know why. Hope that helps.

So in terms of resources, we have now looked at Scientists for Physical resources, Politicians for Human (bonding) resources, and Technicians for Specialised resources. We might even add the Industrialist as the counterpoint to the technician, as they have an eye on whole areas of production in organising how one resource is transformed into another. Last we come to Artists; those who exemplify the use of Mental resources. While it is true that the mind is a tool used in working any kind of material, the artist is particularly concerned with shaping the mind, not using the mind to shape. They do this through a variety of media used to challenge norms of perception, which directly manipulate how the mind interprets data. While some see this simply as entertainment, it is impossible to ignore the effects games and TV serials have on perception. In the worst cases, these can be used to improve combat reflexes and desensitise soldiers to violence. In the best, games can improve strategic cognition, and books can make us aware of alternatives to social norms. I stress emphasis on the last bit.

Within the world of resources, there are only finite materials available to work. Politicians fight over voters just as scientists fight over hadron colliders. I believe that this more than anything else is what drives advanced species to specialised work, because after a certain level of efficiency portions of the population are left without a purpose. To regain one they must move into unclaimed territory, or compete for the resources which have already been claimed.
This is why it is likely technicians who specialised in hunting and gathering later moved on to science as agriculture. Once these resources were controlled, politicians would branch out into human resource in an attempt to maximise group efficiency. Then industrialists would develop to fill the void left by bad politicians by truly organising collected resources. Last of all would come the artist. With the physical world claimed, human relations networked into iron-tight castes, jobs taken by both the industrialist and the technician, the only unclaimed resource is that which existed in the primitive cyberspace between human minds. Artists attempt to occupy this space, pushing into its frontier as resources in other locations became increasingly restricted. We still do. This perhaps explains Charles Bukowski's claim that suffering is essential to art; the more oppressive the physical world, the fewer resources from which to eke out life. The more our human bonds give way to scorched earth, the more desperately we are driven into our minds (or out of them, into virgin psychoses) as the last provider of material which we might shape to regain a sense of purpose.
This too is probably true for all other forms of workers. Artists may even be viewed as oppressors for committing exhibitionism, an act of invading another's psyche through art. A love of science could be brought about by the infringement of art's chaos in a worker's life.

What this shows us is a trend reflected throughout human history running parallel to the matrix of our social development. Just as nations declared sovereign control of resources and forced out those who disagreed with that ownership (rebels, pirates and pariahs), only to have those same outcasts eventually contribute to independent states with codes of their own, so too do outcasts from ‘filled’ career groups move into others to ply their trade when resources are controlled. This is the danger of enforced monopoly. When it occurs, inhabitants of its region move out – like that same idea of a centralised city undergoing industrial revolution, but in reverse. The city empties, the monoliths are deconstructed. When that happens, fewer resource collisions occur and technologies fail to progress.



Doctors, masons, painters and prophets take heed: The story of Babel was misinterpreted. The only metropolis that will ever succeed is one where those of divergent tongue are not cast out and scattered. It was the unity of its language that made Babylon fall.