I really hate using Hitler quotes these days; people take them as ultimate slams, rather than illuminating thoughts from a bad guy. But that said, Adolph did make a very clear and useful statement when he said this:
I have not come into this world to make men better, but to make use of their weaknesses.
This is a fundamental model of human action, and sadly, one that is fairly common. Granted, most people don’t take it nearly as far as Hitler did, but they do use the model, purposely taking advantage of human weaknesses.
My first professional-level boss operated on this principle. He’d take advantage of you as far as you’d let him, although he did compartmentalize his actions. That is, outside of work he acted like my grandpa, but at the office he’d rip me off whenever he could… and he did the same to our customers.
Sadly, there are a lot of people like my old boss, and a lot of them mask their behavior in free-market rhetoric. Nonetheless, the principle underlying their actions is “Make use of their weaknesses.” They may limit their predations to the marketplace (for which I am glad), but their principle of operation inside the marketplace is corrupt, and it tends to corrupt the market as well as themselves.
And while I have no desire to get specific pointing fingers, I will share some examples:
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You sell people things they don’t really need, because you can.
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Your advertising takes advantage of psychological weaknesses – hustling people into buying more of your product than they would if you reasoned with them.
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You get legislation written to drive politically weaker competitors out of your market.
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You pay politicians to force people to buy your product.
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You use your superior influence to have standards written in your favor.
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You purposely mislead customers.
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You use misleading click-bate to juice your numbers and “get famous.”
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You purposely stir controversy to “get famous.”
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You manipulate interest rates so that people have to put their money in a pot you control.
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You customize the web pages people see, serving the desires of those who pay you. The page-viewer isn’t told he/she is being manipulated in this way.
And so on.
I think we all have to admit that this method of doing business is becoming dominant. Clearly it’s already dominant in Washington, DC, on Wall Street, and in the boardrooms of the various mega-corps.
The Bottom Line
The bottom line in all this is that these people aren’t serving their customers and aren’t honest players in a free market. Rather, they are seeking and exploiting weaknesses.
I find that method of living to be pretty damned ugly, and I think it speaks to the insecurities of those who engage in it. If you survive by taking advantage of others, what does that say about your confidence in your own abilities? Or the strength of your self-image minus your possessions?
Enter Emerson
Ralph Waldo Emerson said a lot of interesting things, but few of them better than this short (and edited) passage:
A man buys and sells in the market place and takes care that others shall not cheat him. But a day comes when he takes care that he shall not cheat others. In that day his market-cart becomes a chariot of the sun.
This is the kind of business I like seeing. Furthermore, this is the kind of character development I like seeing.
I see business as a heroic, creative venture, delivering real benefits to humanity. Businesses feed people, move people, house them, clothe them, and cure their diseases. Businesses bless humanity.
So…
My point is that we should consider these two models. Both are operating in what we call free markets, and it is fairly easy to be seduced into using exploitation… and for all the reasons we encountered back in high school:
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The other kids are doing it.
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It makes you cool.
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Jimmy did it and he didn’t get hurt.
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It impresses the chicks (or whomever).
We, however, are no longer teenagers, and so I’ll suggest that we act according to Ralph’s model, not Adolph’s.
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PR
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If you’ve enjoyed Free-Man’s Perspective or A Lodging of Wayfaring Men, you’re going to love Paul Rosenberg’s new novel, The Breaking Dawn.
It begins with an attack that crashes the investment markets, brings down economic systems, and divides the world. One part is dominated by mass surveillance and massive data systems: clean cities and empty minds… where everything is assured and everything is ordered. The other part is abandoned, without services, with limited communications, and shoved 50 years behind the times… but where human minds are left to find their own bearings.
You may never look at life the same way again.
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Paul Rosenberg
www.freemansperspective.com
Part of the reason why there seems to be a epidemic of weakness is because we coddle the weak, and allow them to present obstacles to the not so weak.
I live in a part of the country where those who are strong defenders of their personal sovereignty are simultaneously totally disrespectful of traffic laws that were passed to prevent them from committing assault and particularly, battery, as they “share” the public roadway. Everyone knows what a California stop is, that almost a stop which provides the necessary right of way where there is no one to yield to. Here, what I call a Wyoming turn is more common than a proper turn into the proper lane. People go deep in their turns, squaring off into the far lane instead of the first lane, where they are supposed to turn. I challenge this every chance I get, by turning into the proper lane, forcing them to do likewise. Instead of doing so, they usually cower and glower at me for blocking their illegal path. Should one of them ever commit vehicular battery, I will prosecute them into the local media, in the hope that shaming will do what abiding by the law failed.
Interesting list of examples. IMHO, the first two, at least, aren’t immoral. Selling people things they don’t need? Is it the responsibility of a merchant to query each customer, “What are you going to use this for?” and refuse to sell if he thinks the purpose isn’t valid? I don’t think so. Taking advantage of psychological weaknesses? Impossible to avoid, I think, and again, the responsibility of the buyer to sort out. Out and out lying and fraud are, of course, deplorable and should be criminal, but something like an advertisement showing someone getting laid after he uses a product is just plain smart marketing. Let the buyer beware.
In order to protect myself from being manipulated, I’ve spent a lot of time learning about the techniques used to manipulate us.
Sadly, I can attest to the reality of the seduction to misuse this information.
However, this post has given me the spark for an idea – one that contributes to the improvement of society.
Thanks!
I’m involved in activity (producing manipulating websites) described by Paul. I started doing this when I was 16-17 now I’m 30 so basicly I’m doing it all my adult life, quit even school, I live like a parasite. The only good thing I can think off is that my activity eliminate dumb and naive people, just like cheetah kills weak and ill antelope. I tried to stop it, to start good business but i failed, I’m too scared.