Log of Correspondence
Second Business Plan
Detailed Summary Second Business Plan
Summary of Annexures Second Business Plan
Defined Terms
Second Business Plan
Critics Of Economic Materialism means:
1. “The Gods Must Be Crazy”.
A
Bushman of the Sho
tribe named Xi a noble savage who was used to leading a simple,
fairly utopian life. Xi
salvaged a Coke bottle which was jettisoned in the
Kalahari Desert
from an aircraft in
the 1980 movie classic, “The Gods Must Be Crazy”.
Xi takes the evidence of Western civilization back to his people,
and they use it for many tasks. The people start to fight over the Gods Gift,
so he decides to return it to the God--where he thinks it came from. In
his quest to throw the evil object over the edge of the earth, Xi
encounters two people from Western "civilization," a haphazard doctor and a
tyrannical despot.
Following Xi’s
insight of Western civilisation, he tells the children about the people
he had met: "heavy people ... who seem to know some magic that can make
things move," but are "not very bright, because they can't survive
without their magic contrivances."
2. Ross Gittens - Australian
Economist and Journalist
Gittens' recent book, Gittenomics
focuses on behavioural economics which -
(i) cites many examples of the
folly of Economic Materialism and
Conspicuous Consumption, including multi-nationals utilising
product differentiation to package with various bells and whistles the same
stuff to sell to a cross section of intellects; and
(ii) calls for more attention to human
happiness rather than your ‘bottom line’.
Gittens
contends that -
(a)
people with an intuitive understanding of behavioural
economics are the marketers and the politicians, and
(b)
conventionally trained economists need to better
delineate behavioural economics from conventionally
economic theory.
3. Clive
Hamilton - Executive Director of
The Australia Institute
Hamilton’s Growth Fetish
(2003) contends that the main problem in today’s Australia is not poverty and
disadvantage but affluence
where -
(i)
the real yearning is not for more money, but for authentic identity; and
(ii)
the future lies in creating a society that promotes the things that do improve
our well-being.
Hamilton -
(a) calls for politicians and others
to pay more attention to community well-being; and
(b) urges us to get out of the
shopping malls and into the world of meaningful relationships and spiritual
fulfilment.
Clive Hamilton teamed up with Richard Denniss to write
Affluenza (2005) which contends
consumerism has gripped the
Western World like never before - over-working to
buy more toys we don't have time to play with, so we discard them for newer
toys. Our houses are bigger than ever, but with fewer occupants. Our kids
go to the best schools that we can afford, but we hardly see them. We've got
more money to spend, but our debt levels are skyrocketing.
Adoring the rich and famous at
the cost of our own family, friends and personal fulfilment, whereupon stress,
depression and obesity are at record levels.
Affluenza contends Western
society is addicted to over-consumption. It tracks how much Australians
overwork, the growing mountains of toys we discard, our self-medication panacea
where anti-depressants are doled out like boiled sweets.
Fortunately some change is
happening usually within the higher socio-economic suburbs from older folk who
have heard advertising spin for decades and evidence it spin faster and louder.
More and more Australians are deciding to ignore the advertisers, reduce their
consumer spending and recapture their time for the things that matter.
4.
John Carroll – Professor of Sociology at La
Trobe University
Carroll's re-write of
Humanism, the Wreck of Western Culture
(2004) evidenced The Guardian
review it's "overblown, utterly misguided,
sometimes downright dangerous, not to mention
half-crazed, but important and at times
brilliant."
Carroll insists -
(i) contentment cannot be found in the shopping
centre or local club, or playing with toys such
as a Plasma TV or iPod; and
(ii)
we need something to believe in; we need to
connect with our inner, essential being; we need
to connect more meaningfully with ourselves and
others.
Carroll believes that a high focus on religion
can provide such a state of happiness.
This
Business Plan contends that YELP can
achieve the same and more because it applies the
basic strategy of all military forces the world
over, since time immemorial, to harden their
troops to survive battle.
1. to 4. above offer various
observations from a noble savage, eminent economists and
sociologists which confluence that
Economic Materialism has material
Escalating Fallout whereupon too many of our
Brownfield
Infrastructure troops are
too soft to survive in battle.
The YELP Business Plan
applies a
Adverse Effect And Cause Logic
to
pin-point the
Causes
which can be treated with a remedy called
YELP which provides material
targets and forecasts to provide community,
meaning, contentment and happiness.
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