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The American consumer is like an abused wife.

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tomreedtoon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-17-09 10:02 AM
Original message
The American consumer is like an abused wife.
Okay, hang with this argument for a while as I explain.

For the last few decades, it has been the American consumer that saved the retail sector. For the longest time, merchants were biting their nails at Christmas, hoping that the consumer would bust their budgets and buy those Christmas presents at the last minute. And for years they did, until this year.

The problem is that while the consumers have been ordered to make the meals and keep the house clean, the corporations have been abusing the consumers. Salaries and benefits have been cut. Jobs have been outsourced or eliminated. That's very much like tearing up a wife's pretty dress and beating her every night.

There are only three ways out of spouse abuse. It's unlikely that the "husband" will come around and start treating the "wife" better. As we all know, men, especially husbands, are egotistical bastards who will never admit they are wrong. (Just see Bush's exit speeches. CEO's and the rich are just like him.)

It's also possible that the "wife" has simply had enough and walked out on the bastard. Consumers are not spending money. Stores that provided little value and were abusive to customers, such as Circuit City and the high-end department stores, are drying up. So are all those "niche" stores in shopping malls that sold expensive but shoddy furniture, clothing and jewelry. This process may ultimately weed out the abusers from the businesses that are simply going through a bad time. It may mean a better and wiser "husband" and "wife" whose marriage will work to the benefit of both of them.

What I fear is the final way out of spouse abuse; the "wife" is dead. With no job, no income, no credit and no hope, the bloody corpse of the consumer is lying dead on the kitchen floor. Americans don't make much of anything anymore, with all those outsourced jobs, and what we do make (like Detroit's miserable, badly-designed cars) nobody wants to buy. That means there is no way for the economy to recover.

The "husband" is looking with shock at what he did, not believing that he killed her, thinking that his form of "affection" somehow went wrong. And since he can't take care of himself, he will drink or drug or simply shoot himself to death. And everybody loses.
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GliderGuider Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-17-09 10:32 AM
Response to Original message
1. Excellent metaphor.
Edited on Sat Jan-17-09 10:36 AM by GliderGuider
It's useful for so many aspects of human behaviour. I wrote a piece late last year in which the abusive husband was modern industrial humanity, and the abused wife was Mother Nature: www.paulchefurka.ca/Parable.html
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BR_Parkway Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-17-09 10:51 AM
Response to Original message
2. You should watch more Lifetime - another outcome is the wife gets
sick of that shit and kills the husband.

In addition to the economic mess, maybe we're ready to be citizens again, not simply consumers. I mean what economy is there left to recover?

We have 1 1/2 years worth of housing supply on the market, with who knows how many more foreclosures to come - some will convert to rentals, but it's not like we need to jump off and build a bunch more houses for a while.

Stores are either sitting on inventory they didn't sell or had already looked ahead and cut their inventories - but how much stuff is on a shelf or in a warehouse than any of us need?

Rebuild the Financial Services industry? Travel & Entertainment? I think people are learning that they are actually getting more satisfaction out of their lives now that they've been forced to cut back and find new ways of entertaining themselves.

I don't think there is going to be a recovery - that we're going to have to build an economy from the ground up
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tomreedtoon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-17-09 12:45 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. And when you kill the husband, your only breadwinner...
...you end up dead, or hooking (which seems to be your "self service economy" technique).

"Hooking" is a pretty good metaphor for the "do it yourself, screw the corporate bastards" posts I see here. Wash your toilet paper and use it again! Go to all-natural remedies like the ones sold in South Park, like Cherokee Hair Tampons.

The marriage metaphor is critical because it involves both partners DEPENDING ON each other. Marriage is not necessarily evil. In years past, the marriage between consumer and seller was mutually supported, and it was good for everyone involved.

What happened is that the original husband was replaced by a megacorporate megalomaniac. (See the movie I Married a Monster from Outer Space for some indication as to how that works.) It isn't Mr. Whipple running the place where you buy your Charmin and your groceries; it's the ghost of Sam Walton and his zombie army.


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Hugin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-17-09 12:21 PM
Response to Original message
3. For some more insight on the current situation consider the decline of the Roman Empire...
and the evidence Archaeologists look for to find it in digs.

During it's peak the Ceramics used all over the Empire were of a high quality, mass produced,
and widely traded. The Ceramics were therefore fairly standardized throughout the Empire.

When Rome met it's decline, however, the system of production and trade of these implements
was one of the first to almost universally break down. Suddenly in the record the pottery
changes to much cruder locally made wares. Upon determining the stratum at where this
transition occurs Archaeologists can determine when the Empire lost it's influence in a
given area.

It would seem we're about to face such a transition and as you point out we don't make anything
here anymore, I'd expect to begin to start seeing people either doing without or substituting
cruder locally made wares.

I thought I'd share this factoid.

Your "Beaten Spouse" metaphor is a good one, IMHO.

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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-17-09 03:51 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. Interesting! Thanks Prag!
I haven't given up on the Americans, though. Ingenuity and excellence is in our genes.
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happyslug Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-18-09 08:18 PM
Response to Reply #3
7. Some books on this subject:
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Hugin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-19-09 09:02 AM
Response to Reply #7
8. Wow, that's some heavy reading!
Thanks for pointing it out. :)

Especially, this one. http://www.roman-empire.net/

I recently read "The Satyricon of Petronius" which according to
the Sacred Texts web-site is "A satirical trip through the underbelly of Neros' Rome". Which if one can get past the racy interludes (It's
definitely Not-Safe-For-Work) contains social commentary about life
for Roman Citizens which IMO could also describe life in these here United States. It could've been written yesterday and in fact I've seen some of the same topics discussed at length on DU.

But, the biggest lesson in all of this is that for us to be divided
by ideological lines will surely lead to our fall as a Nation.
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happyslug Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-19-09 10:52 AM
Response to Reply #8
9. Watch "Roman Net" it clearly downplays the lot of the poor during Rome
Edited on Mon Jan-19-09 11:22 AM by happyslug
The main reason is the lack of documentation on the poor, unless something affected the ruling elite it was NOT written down, thus we know of the drop in population after 185 AD, more from the ruling elite complaining of the lack of slaves then anything else.

Another thing it ignores, that the other sources clearly show, is the drop in population in Italy after 650AD (i.e. NOT after the "fall" of the Western Empire, but after the attempted reconquest of the West by Justinian).

A third factor ignored is "who traded where". This is the heart of the argument about vases. The Vases showed who traded where and with with, pointing out the Vandals taking of Carthage was the deadliest act to the Empire, it broke the Empire in two. Prior to the Vandals taking Carthage in 560 AD, trade continued within the Empire, even with the parts under Barbarian control. In fact two sets of vases were made in Tunisia, but never used from one part of Tunis to the other, but used to ship goods from "Africa" (Which we not call "Tunis" for we use the word "Africa" for the whole continent, something the Romans did not do) to either the Eastern or Western Empire (and may be why Caesar re-established Carthage, 100 years after it was destroyed in the Third Punic War, about 500 years before the time period we are talking about). One last comment on Carthage, it was the third largest city in the Roman Empire, behind only Rome itself and Alexandria. In many ways these were the three big city of the Empire, joined by Constantinople, but only after about 400 AD as more and more Romans left Rome for Constantinople.

Just a comment on the site, it is a good site but like a lot of sites has its own agenda. That does NOT mean it is a bad cite for facts, but remember its limitations.

One last comment, the site, like most sites, down play the sheer concentration of wealth the Roman Elite had (and the lost of that wealth between 400-700 AD as the Western Empire fell AND Egypt and Africa was lost to the Arabs). Even Gibbon, in his "Decline of Fall of the Roman Empire" had a problem explaining to his readers and understanding himself this concentration of wealth (And Gibbon lived at the start of today's growth in such concentration of wealth).

In many ways Rome between the Second Punic War and the Arab Conquest was much like today's "Global Economy", i.e. the rich had all the money the rest of the population none. In the period between 400 and 600 AD, most of such wealthy elite lost their money. The Barbarians did not take it, the breakup of the Empire, at first, did not lead to the lost of their wealth (Which was mostly in land) but sooner or later the Barbarians found out they needed the support of the Roman Peasants in their wars with each other, and the best way to get that support was to give the Roman Peasants land, land owned by the Roman Elite. It was this transfer of land that caused Justinian to invade first Africa and then Italy (He was under pressure from the Roman Elite to prevent just lost of property), and would lead to the lost of both within 100 years of Justinian's death (The Lombards in 570 AD seem to have been called into Italy by the peasants, probably via their parish priests. At the same time the Avars were attacking Constantinople, both for their own goals AND to help out their long term allies the Lombards when the Arabs attacked and took North Africa around 650 AD.

Yes in the previous paragraph I am ignoring the Persian Wars, which set up the area for the subsequent Arab Conquest. The wars with Persia were bloodier then the subsequent Arab Wars, and for this reason both Rome and Persia had been bleed dry by them (This opening up the Middle East for Conquest by Arabia under Mohammad).

I am also ignoring the failed attempt to conquer Africa right after Egypt fell to the Arabs. Carthage did NOT fall at the same time as Egypt, it took another generation for the Arabs to take Carthage. The problem for the Roman Elite was that by losing both areas the Eastern Empire lost the last two areas of extensive elite ownership of land. Modern Greece and Turkey was the last area of the Empire with small farmers, and this fact cut even the Eastern Empire from the old ruling elite (Which forced the Eastern Empire to drop the Mercenary Legion system for the Thematic system of raising troops locally, and tyeing military service with land ownership, a concept foreign to Imperial Rome, but the heart of the Army of what we call the Byzantine Empire). Thus after the Arab Conquest the Old Roman Elite had lost almost all their lands and could NOT even be a source of revenue to pay for the Army. The Old Roman elite had a Choice either to die out or join some local area as just a local landowner.

This change (and death of the first "World Economy") is ignored by Roman.net and most papers on the Fall of the Roman Empire.
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2Design Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-17-09 04:46 PM
Response to Original message
6. abuser never see themselves as wrong - it is always their victims fault
their contriteness is only to get back into favor as a bad boy would - they bring flowers or act nice for awhile - they blame their victim for their behavior - they say they would not act that way if it was not the victim who caused it - this is true for the torture and killing and other stuff the usa is doing to innocent people and just to people in general the world over - this mentality is the way of corporations and especially salespeople - everyone else is stupid if they do not buy their junk, message, propoganda, etc. It is all part of the cycle of abuse - the victims want to believe the abuser can change
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