I grew into dirty hippiedom (I mostly got over it, so relax) at the hands of, among other influences, The Samples. They have a song (don’t ask me which: like all dirty hippies, formerly or presently, I’m lax on details) that features the lyrics “take what you need, and leave the rest/take what you need, and leave it alone…” Sort of an Amerindian anthem of material efficiency…
I sit in my cozy home, and use my gratuitously useless, conspicuously consumptive lifestyle to wonder: why are there starving children? Why don’t we help everyone…? (While doing not a thing to help much of anyone, really, but myself…)
At the same time I’m painfully aware, that without the underpinings of my grosssly excessive lifestyle, there wouldn’t be an option of helping everyone. I probably wouldn’t even be aware anyone else needed help: I’d be too busy sleeping away another 18-hour day of trying to scratch out simple survival…
I wonder: did any aboriginal Americans protest the decorative use of bones and feathers? Did they lament the gratuitous and wasteful use of materials? Is it human nature to convert want to need? And take the difference for granted?
Or have I just been thinking too much?
Why can’t I just take it all for granted all the time? This occasional spark of consciousness is a real thorn in my side…
And this is what I get for talking to my brother the Arch-Capitalist/Pragmatist, drinking too much beer, and reading Frank Herbert.
If there’s a lesson in there, it probably has chiefly to do with not drinking so much beer…

