Fundamentalist Consumerism and an Insane Society
February 2009
By Bruce E. Levine
Originally published by ZMag.
At a giant Ikea store in Saudi Arabia in 2004, three people were killed by a stampede of shoppers fighting for one of a limited number of $150 credit vouchers. Similarly, in November 2008, a worker at a New York Wal-Mart was trampled to death by shoppers intent on buying one of a limited number of 50-inch plasma HDTVs.
Jdiniytai Damour, a temporary maintenance worker was killed on “Black Friday.” In the predawn darkness, approximately 2,000 shoppers waited impatiently outside Wal-Mart, chanting, “Push the doors in.” According to Damour’s fellow worker Jimmy Overby, “He was bum-rushed by 200 people. They took the doors off the hinges. He was trampled and killed in front of me.” Witnesses reported that Damour, 34 years old, gasped for air as shoppers continued to surge over him. When police instructed shoppers to leave the store after Damour’s death, many refused, some yelling, “I’ve been in line since yesterday morning.”
The mainstream press covering Damour’s death focused on the mob of crazed shoppers and, to a lesser extent, irresponsible Wal-Mart executives who failed to provide security. However, absent in the corporate press was anything about a consumer culture and an insane society in which marketers, advertisers, and media promote the worship of cheap stuff.
Along with journalists, my fellow mental health professionals have also covered up societal insanity. An exception is the democratic-socialist psychoanalyst Erich Fromm (1900-1980). Fromm, in The Sane Society (1955), wrote: “Yet many psychiatrists and psychologists refuse to entertain the idea that society as a whole may be lacking in sanity. They hold that the problem of mental health in a society is only that of the number of ‘unadjusted’ individuals, and not of a possible unadjustment of the culture itself.”
While people can resist the cheap-stuff propaganda and not worship at Wal-Mart, Ikea, and other big-box cathedrals—and stay out of the path of a mob of fundamentalist consumers—it is difficult to protect oneself from the slow death caused by consumer culture. Human beings are every day and in numerous ways psychologically, socially, and spiritually assaulted by a culture which:
- creates increasing material expectations
- devalues human connectedness
- socializes people to be self-absorbed
- obliterates self-reliance
- alienates people from normal human emotional reactions
- sells false hope that creates more pain
Increasing material expectations.
These expectations often go unmet and create pain, which fuels emotional difficulties and destructive behaviors. In a now classic 1998 study examining changes in the mental health of Mexican immigrants who came to the United States, public policy researcher William Vega found that assimilation to U.S. society meant three times the rate of depressive episodes for these immigrants. Vega also found major increases in substance abuse and other harmful behaviors. Many of these immigrants found themselves with the pain of increased material expectations that went dissatisfied and they also reported the pain of diminished social support.
Devaluing of human connectedness.
A 2006 study in the American Sociological Review noted that the percentage of Americans who reported being without a single close friend to confide in rose in the last 20 years from 10 percent to almost 25 percent. Social isolation is highly associated with depression and other emotional problems. Increasing loneliness, however, is good news for a consumer economy that thrives on increasing numbers of “buying units”—more lonely people means selling more televisions, DVDs, psychiatric drugs, etc.
Promotes selfishness.
Self-absorption is one of many reasons for U.S. skyrocketing rates of depression and other emotional difficulties—and self-absorption is exactly what a consumer culture demands. The Buddha, 2,500 years ago, recognized the relationship between selfish craving and emotional difficulties, and many observers of human beings, from Spinoza to Erich Fromm, have come to similar conclusions.
Obliterates self-reliance.
The loss of self-reliance can create painful anxiety, which fuels depression and other problematic behaviors. In modern society, an increasing number of people—women as well as men—cannot cook a simple meal. They will never know the anti-anxiety effects of being secure in their ability to prepare their own food, grow their own vegetables, hunt, fish, or gather food for survival. In a consumer culture, such self-reliance makes no sense. At some level, people know that should they lose their incomes—not impossibilities these days—they have no ability to survive.
Alienation from humanity.
The priests of consumer culture—advertisers and marketers—know that fundamentalist consumers will buy more if they are alienated from such normal reactions as boredom, frustration, sadness, and anxiety. If these priests can convince us that a given emotional state is shameful or evidence of a disease, then we will be more likely to buy not only psychiatric drugs, but also all kinds of products to make ourselves feel better. When we become frightened and alienated from a natural human reaction, this “pain over pain” creates more fuel for depression and other self-destructive behaviors and harmful actions.
Pain of false hope.
The false hope of fundamentalist consumerism is that we will one day discover a product that can predictably manipulate moods without any downsides. Modern psychiatry is a full member of consumer culture. Its “Holy Grail” is a search for the antidepressant that can take away the pain of despair, but not destroy life. In the late 19th century, Freud thought he had found it with cocaine. In the middle of the 20th century, psychiatrists thought they had found it with amphetamines, and later with tricyclic antidepressants like Tofranil and Elavil. At the end of the 20th century, there were the SSRIs, such as Prozac, Paxil, and Zoloft, which were ultimately found to create dependency and painful withdrawal and to be no more effective than placebos. Whatever the antidepressant drug, it is introduced as taking away depression without destroying life. Time after time, it is then discovered that when one tinkers with neurotransmitters, there is—as there is with electroshock and psycho-surgery—damage to life.
Fundamentalists reject both reason and experience. Fundamentalists are attached to dogma and if their dogma fails, they don’t give it up, but instead resolve to deepen their faith and double down on their dogma.
Erich Fromm, 54 years ago, concluded: “Man [sic] today is confronted with the most fundamental choice; not that between Capitalism or Communism, but that between robotism (of both the capitalist and the communist variety), or Humanistic Communitarian Socialism. Most facts seem to indicate that he is choosing robotism and that means, in the long run, insanity and destruction. But all these facts are not strong enough to destroy faith in man’s reason, good will, and sanity. As long as we can think of other alternatives, we are not lost.”
Breaking free of fundamentalist consumerism means thinking of alternatives and it also means an active defiance: choosing to experience the various dimensions of life that have been excluded by the dogma.
Z
Bruce E. Levine is a clinical psychologist and author of Surviving America’s Depression Epidemic: How to Find Morale, Energy, and Community in a World Gone Crazy (Chelsea Green Publishing, 2007).
6 comments
Comments feed for this article
February 8, 2009 at 11:30 pm
links for 2009-02-08 « earth is my favourite planet
[…] Capitalism Reduces Humans to ‘Buying Units’ « The End of Capitalism Fundamentalists reject both reason and experience. Fundamentalists are attached to dogma and if their dogma fails, they don’t give it up, but instead resolve to deepen their faith and double down on their dogma. […]
February 9, 2009 at 4:23 am
aaron
You speak of capitalism as a plague – true, real business capitalism properly employed requires customers to be 100% happy or at least 99.9% happy. If not, then they can get in trouble. I have given refunds when my clients have big problems, I do not want to end up on Rip off or BBB compliant. This is what the government needs to do, enforce customer service and not bail out companies.
Increasing material expectations.
– One cannot take this out of the human existance without creating a world of robots. Those with merit will always want to have a better lifestyle than those without – those with power will also want this and it will be tough to tame ambitious people that create value and employ the masses… think about what you are asking to tell people not to ever expect more out of life – it’s what they need to expect, some of what you mention.
Devaluing of human connectedness.
– Real capitalism promotes connected people because a company that gets too big loses relationships to smaller and nimble companies when there is no subsidy.
Promotes selfishness.
– There is no way to eliminate those that are selfish other than to channel their ambition to acquire resources and the best view. Marketing can be tuned but the bigger picture is ego and testosterone and nobody wants to mess with the DNA that created our domination of this planet in the first place.
Obliterates self-reliance.
– We live in a high tech world, it’s not as important as it once was and even if shit hit the fan, how healthy is the natural world now a days???
Alienation from humanity.
– Real capitalism truly participated would require all businesses to create real realtionships of accountabiliy with all clients.
Pain of false hope.
– This sounds more like the government in any form because of it’s market inefficiencies. There is no false hope if there is a level playing field.
just my ideas.
February 14, 2009 at 9:44 pm
Frank Mancuso
Want to or not we are mandated to be consumers, we have no choice. Even now with the new administration the cure all words growth and jobs have taken center stage. Ah but the delema of it all. On one hand consumption and all the trapings, like a perimiad sceme. Jobs cause consumption which causes jobs which causes consumption. Oh ya there was mention of global warming, clean energy, but capatalism trumps all. It’s a firestorm, like the sun feeding on itself consuming the very fuel of its being. And so in the end maybe the world to will be consumed by fire as predicted but it will be the fire of combustion taking place in our power plants and internal combustion engins. We will consume and consume every drop of oil, lump of coal, stick of wood. In the end CAPATILISM is the fuel of armageddon.
April 21, 2009 at 1:04 pm
James
Capitalism is all about freedom;the freedom to claim ownership over the natural resources needed by all to survive,the freedom to profit from the basic needs of other human beings while at the same time accumulating enough wealth to be able to become independent of the needs of others.Capitalism promotes freedom,” for a few ”by reducing the general population to nothing more than economic pawns,who must depend upon the ownership class for the meeting of even the most basic of biological needs.
Capitalism is about population control.The portion of humanity that can not afford land to live upon or to produce food upon, is the portion that can not afford to live.That portion is now growing ever larger.The time will soon arive when the vast majority of the human population will not have accsess to land,food or water.The bulk of humanity will have become trespassers upon a privately owned planet.This is the unavoidable conclusion of capitalism. When the ownership class no longer needs or chooses not to sell,the consumer class will no longer have a right to live.Capitalism assures that death will be the only hope of freedom for all but a minute portion of humanity. For the sake of your children and grandchildren demand an end to the capitalist system. Support,promote and help build an economy based upon the right of all humans to derive the resources needed to sustain life from nature.An economy based upon the mutual sharing of the natural commons is the only economic system that will make freedom and life possible for all,not just a small ownership class.Remember, this is not a private planet !
May 7, 2009 at 2:15 am
endofcapitalism
Thanks Aaron, Frank and James for your comments!
i just wanted to highlight something that James put out there, cause it was REALLY smart:
“The time will soon arive when the vast majority of the human population will not have accsess to land,food or water.The bulk of humanity will have become trespassers upon a privately owned planet.”
every day thousands of people are thrown off their ancestral lands, that they have lived on for generations, and are forced to move into cities. this can be done forcefully through evictions, government intervention, racism, etc., but is more commonly a result of economic privation through DEBT. once stripped of our land, we become dependent on selling our labor in order to survive, and competing against every other worker on the planet for a wage. in response to Aaron, wouldn’t you consider this self-perpetuating and ruthless system a plague?
in the words of James:
“For the sake of your children and grandchildren demand an end to the capitalist system. Support,promote and help build an economy based upon the right of all humans to derive the resources needed to sustain life from nature.”
thanks again
alex
January 14, 2014 at 7:52 pm
The Black Road of Technology | Collapse of Industrial Civilization
[…] the trivialization of life that feeds its commodification. The individual is reduced to a “buying unit” by the skyscrapers, institutions, and bureaucracy of capitalism, but in a future world of […]