Sunday, April 19, 2020

The Restoration of Action


During some of the more labored exchanges I have on Facebook, there are times when it would be legitimate for any rational person to wonder: "Why bother? You think your way. Others think their way. So why argue?" This is where knowing a little something about Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) is useful. Arendt divided the human experience into three categories: Labor, Work and Action. Labor includes what we do every day to maintain our biological existence (drinking, eating, sleeping). Work includes what we do to build the world we live in (carpenter, bus driver, doctor or, the ultimate profession, programmer - wink). Action is the interaction between people as equals in a public forum to debate and determine the meaning things in the world they share. In short, it is the realm of the political, but not the post-Enlightenment version as a means to an end for economic systems and legal rights. Arendt is referring to the pre-Enlightenment version, where people engaged with one another to establish their identities, their cultures and a sense of meaning and belonging that does not come from Labor, Work or economic and legal systems that are based on the notion of rational self interest. In today's modern society, we cycle between Labor and Work, and we relegate Action to the margins. It is no wonder that we suffer from a collective identity crisis. Our point of confusion around WHO we are versus WHAT we do is what Arendt dubbed 'Economic Man'. The ancient Greeks had a very different notion of life. For them, Labor and Work were a means to an end for Action as the most important aspect of life, where engaging with their fellow man (woman) to discuss, debate and arrive at the meaning of things, including the meaning of life and their position in it, took precedence. Today's version of this engagement is rooted in polarized media outlets, hash-tag campaigns, political memes and echo chambers, which do not foster real discourse and do not create real meaning. We have ceded our role as political actors responsible for shaping the world around us, to a role of political casualties, just trying to survive through Labor and Work, and arranging ourselves along black and white political lines that serve interests that are not our own. It is little wonder that one of Arendt's most famous books is The Origins of Totalitarianism. Whatever your opinion about the evils of Social Media, up to and including the amplification of all of the evils I just mentioned, one undeniable fact about it is that it has restored a public realm for people to engage in, which has liberated us from the isolated cycle of Labor and Work. There are certain exchanges that I have had with certain people that I would have never had outside of a heated Facebook thread. This form of engagement has re-established vital lines of communication. This is why I bother engaging in those belabored exchanges. I am not trying to achieve some kind of end, I am engaging in the restoration of action to find meaning.

Friday, April 17, 2020

The Brave New World


We will need to begin a phased reopening of the country prior to a coronavirus vaccine being available, if there ever is one, and no matter what phasing and coordination, there will be an uptick in COVID-19 cases. This so-called 'M curve' can only be minimized, not avoided, because we have to live our lives, and there is no such thing as a risk-free life or, in some cases, a risk-free livelihood. This will probably create an awareness in us that we should already have, i.e. clean hands, clean phone, sensitivity to symptoms, self-isolation, proactive medical care, etc. It will also create a minimalist mindset with benefits to society, e.g. minimizing activities that contribute to global warming, and detriments, e.g. minimizing activities that contribute to heart warming :-) I believe that one of the most valuable upsides will be the fact that when someone shakes your hand or gives you a hug or attends your party or eats at your restaurant, they will be conveying to you that you are worth the risk. That is a good thing.

Saturday, April 11, 2020

The Choice

In The Republic (380 BC), Plato wonders if the average citizen of a society is the right person to be making the decisions about who should be making the decisions for a society. And this has been a question we (at the very least, Western Civilizations) have grappled with since then. In Walter Lippmann's 1922 book Public Opinion, he states that, in the face the ever-increasing complexity of the world, especially relative to the democracy that our Founding Fathers created, average citizens navigate the world through stereotypes (about everything, including the government, environment, medicine, etc), which are fed, in large part, by the media. (This is back in 1922!). If you look at the ever increasing polarization of stereotypes fed by the ever-widening gap between media outlets, you can see how perfectly rational people can be led to vastly different conclusions about the world. I think that "our" job is to close that gap. That means that I actually read posts (and shared articles) of people that I do not agree with, and I actually expect them to consider my counterpoints. I am not sure if this expectation is realistic, but what choice do I have?

Friday, March 20, 2020

POTUS-45 vs COVID-19

When things are going well, very few people ask "who is the single person responsible for our success?". But when things are not going well, the common question is often "who is the single person responsible for our failure?" We have a basic psychological need to find someone to blame when things go wrong, but, in reality, complex systems produce both success and failure. POTUS exacerbates this skewed perception, because we often over-attribute good and bad outcomes to the President, probably because the President is such a visible character and is quite over-covered by the media, whether Clinton, Bush, Obama or Trump. Of course, you can give credit for a job well done, and criticism for a job not well done, because POTUS does play a role, but if you give too much credit or criticism, then you neglect the shared accountability of congress, state and local government, non-governmental agencies, industry leaders and, most importantly, ourselves. I - personally - never wrote my congressman to ask them to sponsor a bill to create excess capacity in emergency medical facilities or stockpile urgent medical supplies, nor did I stockpile supplies in my home or plan for long-term sheltering in place. We can certainly criticize POTUS for his dismissive tone as this crisis ramped up, and other moves that delayed testing or delayed the kind of over-response required to stem the tide of a pandemic. However, overall, these can only be called poor reactions, whereas the real problem here is not having a preemptive system in place. This would go far beyond the NSC Pandemic Unit that Trump disbanded in 2018, though it would be nice to have that top-level office at this juncture. Regardless, I hope that 'preparedness' becomes a more tangible topic after the dust settles on COVID-19.

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Deli Contingencies

In life, I like to give myself three chances. This is why, when I take a ticket for the line at the Deli, I take 3 tickets, just in case I miss my number, or someone double clicks to the next person, etc, etc. Today was the first time in - say - 20 years where this ridiculous strategy paid off. I am not sure how, but the fellas behind the counter skipped over my first two numbers. I don't even think they called them out. I sprang into action upon hearing my third number, mainly because I did not want to spend the next 20 years taking 4 tickets ;-)

Sunday, January 26, 2020

TV Sloppiness

Like most people, I really appreciate good movies and TV series, moreso the latter. For example, Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan on Amazon Prime. Season 1 was superb. Season 2 is also good, but it suffers from a bad case of implausible coincidences and outright omissions. One minute Jack is about to be executed by an assassin, the next, the woman that was shot in the foot by said assassin and left incapacitated 100+ KM away shoots him in the back of the head. One scene, Jack gets stabbed in the arm, the next he is wearing short sleeves and wringing his hands without so much as a band-aid. The story line is still excellent, but these little things add up to make the show feel unbuttoned. It is like going to see Tosca at the Met and noticing that Mario Cavaradossi is wearing high top Converse sneakers. If the objective is to create an alternate reality for the viewer to immerse themselves within, then the craft must be at a higher level.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

The Daily Pattern

Every morning when I wake up, my first thought is ending the day, which consists of the sequence of steps that match the pattern I want for myself on a daily basis. I start each step with an eye towards the next one, but no further. It is a very simple plan: coffee > gym > ready > eat > work > study > home > family > bed :-) Breakfast is my one and only meal on most days, so I don't have to deal with the logistics of lunch or dinner, nor do I have to effect any will power for said meals, nor do I have to kill myself in the gym to manage my weight. This particular plan is not for everyone, but the strategy of defining the lifecycle of a day and targeting it as a pattern to live by can, I think, work for everyone, whatever the pattern. Further, taking the guess work out of every day living leaves more room to be creative, because it conserves energy that might otherwise be spent on deciding between a salad or an entire bag of dark chocolate Hershey's kisses for lunch (wink).