“One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.”
LEAVE IT TO PEEVER exists to give the other side of the story. Challenge the status quo. Confront conventional wisdom. This is sadly needed. I believe it is best to always cast positive doubt on the powers that be. It helps to even up the story.Or score. Please feel free to comment and submit articles. Not everything needs to be serious. I use a lot of slapstick humor, satire, and pontificating. Sit back, relax, and enjoy. We're about to embark on a survival adventure.
Thursday, November 21, 2019
Conscious Consumerism
Spending money and consuming goods. It’s the American way.
Buy. Buy. Buy. We are told it is good for the economy. More jobs. More choice.
A better, happier life. But many are now countering that simple living is more
sustainable. Better for the environment. Less debt. Less stress. So, which will
it be: more or less?
At Christmas, we typically go into a buying frenzy. Most
retail business measure the success of the year by their sales during the
Christmas holiday. Pressure to buy is put on us from every conceivable angle.
So we do. Who is to say why? Many ingredients make up this need to buy. It is
almost as though the act of buying is tied into our belief system: the more we
buy, the better off we are. The more prosperous we look. The act of giving,
often beyond our means, has become a major part of our identity, wrapped
heavily in with the Christmas spirit.
Advertising lends itself well to this need. TV, radio, newspapers.
From every conceivable angle, we are driven to buy. Your kids will love you,
your life will be better, easier, more enjoyable. And in this process, the TV
and radio stations, as well as newspapers, become hooked on the ad’s. Ad
revenue is the driving force behind all of these industries. The banking and
credit industries are in this same cycle. You can bet most credit is wracked-up
during the holidays. That sets the stage for debt to be a never ending year
round payment to the banking industry. You can never get caught up with the 20%
interest payment you are making. You end up paying the interest payment every
month, never the principal.
So how do we get out of this conundrum? How can we establish
some reasonableness to our giving? How can we focus on giving that will be less
detrimental to the environment? More focused on local producers of products?
Yet still being able to fulfill our need to give, to show our love and
gratitude to others. Our love.
Those, as well as other questions, will be asked at our next
podcast: Conscious Consumerism: How to feel good about what you buy. We hope
you will be able to attend. November 14, 6-8pm, at the Knox County Brewing
Company.
Monday, November 11, 2019
DAY OF RECKONING
Billionaires are becoming a major problems. They think they make good politicians. They barely make good humans. We need to take their money away. Let them struggle like the rest of us. Then we'll see what kind of a person they really are. At the very least, they need to pay taxes. That, or the rest of us need to stop. Why should they get away from it and we not? NO MORE TAXES UNTIL THEY PAY UP.
Friday, November 1, 2019
CONSUMERISM: JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS
CONSUMERISM: Just in time for Christmas
Spending money and consuming goods. It’s the American way.
Buy. Buy. Buy. We are told it is good for the economy. More jobs. More choice.
A better, happier life. But many are now countering that simple living is more
sustainable. Better for the environment. Less debt. Less stress. So, which will
it be: more or less?
At Christmas, we typically go into a buying frenzy. Most
retail business measure the success of the year by their sales during the
Christmas holiday. Pressure to buy is put on us from every conceivable angle.
So we do. Who is to say why? Many ingredients make up this need to buy. It is
almost as though the act of buying is tied into our belief system: the more we
buy, the better off we are. The more prosperous we look. The act of giving,
often beyond our means, has become a major part of our identity, wrapped
heavily in with the Christmas spirit.
Advertising lends itself well to this need. TV, radio, newspapers.
From every conceivable angle, we are driven to buy. Your kids will love you,
your life will be better, easier, more enjoyable. And in this process, the TV
and radio stations, as well as newspapers, become hooked on the ad’s. Ad
revenue is the driving force behind all of these industries. The banking and
credit industries are in this same cycle. You can bet most credit is wracked-up
during the holidays. That sets the stage for debt to be a never ending year
round payment to the banking industry. You can never get caught up with the 20%
interest payment you are making. You end up paying the interest payment every
month, never the principal.
So how do we get out of this conundrum? How can we establish
some reasonableness to our giving? How can we focus on giving that will be less
detrimental to the environment? More focused on local producers of products?
Yet still being able to fulfill our need to give, to show our love and
gratitude to others. Our love.
Those, as well as other questions, will be asked at our next
podcast. Consumerism: more or less? We hope you will be able to attend.
November 14, 6-8pm, at the Knox County Brewing Company.
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