NireBryce

reality is the battlefield

the first line goes in Cohost embeds

🐥 I am not embroiled in any legal battle
🐦 other than battles that are legal 🎮

I speak to the universe and it speaks back, in it's own way.

mastodon

email: contact at breadthcharge dot net

I live on the northeast coast of the US.

'non-functional programmer'. 'far left'.

conceptual midwife.

https://cohost.org/NireBryce/post/4929459-here-s-my-five-minut

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margot
@margot

was listening to a podcast yesterday where they interviewed a former border guard-turned-border activist and one thing they talked about that struck me was when they talked about how the border guard used to do a lot more rescue, but at a certain point the suicide rate for the profession went up super high due to the increase in people dying, so they started outsourcing the rescue to a private company instead. and how one of the consequences of that that the former agent noticed was a much more callous attitude of border guards towards ppl trying to cross the border, bc they didn't actually have to deal with them personally anymore.

and anyway it made me think of this concept i've had for a while, about how one of the primary functions of capitalism is abstraction-- to insulate the human cost of decisions from the people making those decisions because its easier to make the profitable decisions if you aren't or don't have to or even can't conceptualize the actual people involved, the consequences of your actions, because the majority of humans are actually not as evil as we'd think based on how they act, so that abstraction provides an insulating layer for profits. and how all of us are complicit in this to some extent just by virtue of being born into this system-- even if you do your best to divest yourself of it, even if you consciously choose the right decision every time its offered, the system works so well that we can't even be aware of half of the costs of what we do.

not sure where i'm going with this but its been on my mind a lot. im definitely not trying to convince anyone its all pointless to struggle against-- lord knows i still do as much as i possibly can bear, and i think its important for everyone to push against their comfort zone particularly if they're aware of the harms it can cause-- but the scope of the problem outstrips my ability to conceptualize any kind of solution besides taking the steps i can see.


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in reply to @margot's post:

I hate that I think I know exactly who you're talking about because there is exactly one ex-border patrol and exactly one ex-cop doing this kind of work and absolutely no Ex-Cops Against Murdering People kind of org

This gives me an image in my head of a pulley saving work – and then adding more pulleys which in turn saves more work and gets more output, but also requires more care, maintenance, and much longer string.

even more generally than human costs, i think capitalist systems evolve towards ever greater offloading of externalities. we are very much living in the world created by "not my problem" because stopping to consider whether it might be your problem pretty much always reduces the perceived rate of profit.