VIDEO 1 “THE ADDICTION ECONOMY” BY MOON / WATCH AND SUBSCRIBE TO MOON ON YOUTUBE
“Don’t ask questions. Just consume product and then get excited for next product.” This pretty much sums up the Consumption Economy in a nutshell. And none of this is going to just go away. It’s only getting smarter, faster, flashier, sexier, more alluring.
VIDEO 2 “CONSUMERISM IS REALLY A PROBLEM” BY OUR CHANGING CLIMATE / WATCH AND SUBSCRIBE TO OUR CHANGING CLIMATE ON YOUTUBE
A look at the real trap of consumerism. Specifically, why consumerism is not the real cause of exploitation and the climate crisis, but instead a symptom of greed and predatory capitalism. Capitalist overproduction drives companies and corporations to create false needs and desires, which leads to overconsumption. We need to shift our attention away from consumerism and overconsumption and towards overproduction. Another side of consumer culture is people buy a lot of stuff to prop up their self-identities. We all understand spending all our time selling people junk so we can afford to pay rent and buy ourselves a little consolation junk is just the most unhappy and uninteresting way we as a society could be using our time.
VIDEO 3 “THE GLOBAL JUNK FOOD CONSPIRACY” BY BEST DOCUMENTARY / WATCH AND SUBSCRIBE TO BEST DOCUMENTARY ON YOUTUBE
In Europe, food manufacturers have signed up to ‘responsibility pledges’, promising no added sugar, preservatives, artificial colours or flavours and not to target children. So why are they using tactics banned in the West in the developing world? There, they have created ultra-low-cost products with higher levels of salt, sugar and saturated fats. Filmed in Brazil, India and France, we investigate the new tactics of brands like Coca-Cola, McDonald’s and Domino’s Pizza.
THIS PRESENTATION IS ORGANIZED AND SUBMITTED BY THE INTERNATIONAL CHRONICLES
We’ve all heard of Disaster Capitalism: the Powers That Be either initiate or amplify a crisis as a means of granting themselves “emergency powers” which just so happen to further concentrate the nation’s wealth and power in the hands of the few at the expense of the many.
Naomi Klein described the concept and cited examples in her 2008 book The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, and summarized the core dynamic: “Disaster capitalism perpetuates cycles of poverty and exploitation.”
Move over, Disaster Capitalism–make room for Addiction Capitalism.
Addiction Capitalism is my term for the last-ditch / desperation method of guaranteeing sales and profits when everybody already has everything: reduce the quality so everything fails and must be replaced, and addict your customers to your product or service which–what a surprise–only you or your cartel provide.
And since you’ve bought up all the competition and moated your monopoly via regulatory thickets / regulatory capture, consumers must continue paying–or suffer the consequences. Addiction Capitalism is capital’s last best hope when the essentials of life and novelties are both over-supplied. So the only ways to juice demand and maintain profits are 1) lower the quality of goods so they must be constantly replaced (Cory Doctorow’s “ensh**tification”) and 2) addict consumers to services such as social media and products such as smartphones, or create dependencies which are equivalent to addiction, such as dependency on weight-loss medications.
Just as the addict is dependent on a drug, patients are dependent on medications that must be taken until the end of their lives.
Jonathan Haidt’s new book offers a scathing indictment of the intentionally addictive–and destructive–nature of social media and smartphones The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness.
For another example of how Addiction Capitalism works, consider how tech companies sell a basic accounting software system for a small sum until it becomes a standard for households and small businesses. Then they eliminate outright purchase of the software and switch to a high-cost subscription model. A nice little history of all your financial records you got there; it would be a shame to lose all that by refusing to pay our monthly fee.
Put another way: going cold turkey and refusing to pay the subscription/prescription is going to be painful. That monkey on your back comes in many forms: checking your phone 300 times a day, obsessively counting “likes,” binging on streaming TV and snacks, junk food, fast food, and other addictive glop–the list is long indeed.
Addiction Capitalism is neatly summarized in this scene from Bruce Lee’s 1973 martial arts film Enter the Dragon, where the villain Han reveals his opium empire to martial artist Roper, played by John Saxon:
Han: “We are investing in corruption, Mr. Roper. The business of corruption is like any other.”
Roper: “Oh yeah! Provide your customers with products they need and, uh, charge a little bit to stimulate your market, and before you know it customers come to depend on you, I mean really need you. It’s the law of economics.”
That’s Addiction Capitalism in a nutshell: “customers come to depend on you, I mean really need you.”