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December
09
2024

What Happened to Integrity and Honor?
Charles Hugh Smith

The hope here is that facing the reality of moral collapse frees us of the delusion that fiddling with technocratic financial abstractions and policy tweaks can reverse moral collapse.  

Ours is a technocratic culture with a short attention span, and so problems and solutions are understood to be 1) technocratic and 2) instant. The problem is something that can be distilled down to a spreadsheet, formula, algorithm or legalistic policy, and the solution is some modification of spreadsheet, formula, algorithm or legalistic policy: all our problems will go away if we just end the Fed, switch to cryptocurrency, tweak some laws, get rid of the bankers, eliminate an agency, and so on. 

These solutions will offer immediate relief. The problems will start melting away the minute we modify the spreadsheet, algorithm, financial settings or legal code. 

But what if the problem is the collapse of integrity and honor, a moral rot that has consumed the foundations of our social order? If this is the root problem, then technocratic-financial solutions are the equivalent of excising a wart from the big toe and declaring that as a result of this procedure, the brain cancer has been cured. 

What if the problem is that everything we're cheering as Progress is actually the opposite--it's Anti-Progress? What if all the technocratic "advances" that are constantly being hyped as wondrous are actually harming our physical and mental health? 

So a product labeled as a "veggie snack" that's nothing more than fat-soaked, sugary potato starch is lauded because it's immensely profitable, a virtue gained by deceiving parents into thinking a "veggie snack" is a healthy snack. 

That this is a culture in moral collapse is obvious, but we dare not admit it.That integrity and honor have decayed to the point of parody is equally obvious, but that too doesn't register in a culture attuned to novelty, profit, gadgets, legalese, techno-fantasies and technocratic "solutions" to problems that aren't even visible to technocrats. 

Integrity and honor have, along with everything else, been commoditized into something we sell as a "product" or "enhancement." Virtue-signaling has replaced actual integrity, and as the host of my latest podcast observed, the job of corporate CEOs is not to make quality products; their job is to elevate the corporation's stock price by whatever means are available--including hollowing out quality, reliability and durability. 

Seeking a Culture of Honor and Integrity with Emerson Fersch and Amy LeNoble (59 min) 

In this state of moral collapse, we look to centralized authorities to solve all our problems. But the collapse of integrity and honor does not have a legal, financial or technocratic solution. We have to reverse that collapse ourselves rather than rely on centralized diktats from on high to fix what's broken. 

Before we get to the hope, let's first review reality. Here is loneliness--soaring. 

 

Here's a snapshot of our social contacts: now mostly online: 

 

With the easily predictable results: social trust is decaying.... 

 

...Along with the bottom 90%'s trust in institutions and centralized authorities, both public and private. 

 

And we all know how positive online interactions are for our collective mental health: 

 

Every one of these graphics depicts a social order in collapse, yet this truth is greeted with silence or delusional misdirections and self-referential parodies being passed off as "solutions." 

Let's say we want a lifestyle stripped of denial, moral rot, techno-fantasies and technocratic delusions, a lifestyle of responsibility, accountability, integrity and honor. Oops, sorry, that lifestyle is out of stock and we don't anticipate any reordering. 

 

The hope here is that facing the reality of moral collapse frees us of the delusion that fiddling with technocratic financial abstractions and policy tweaks can reverse moral collapse and Anti-Progress. We are then free to see the problem is spiritual and cultural, realms that we change in our own lives, not by waiting around for central authorities--the state, Big Tech, etc.--to fix for us. 

We need a new way of living, not more gadgets and financial "innovations." A restoration of basic integrity and honor cannot be achieved by technocratic "solutions"--policies, crypto, apps, algos, AI--for the belief that these are solutions has blinded us to the decay and collapse of the foundations of the social order. 

Yes, it's understandable that we all want a solution to the collapse of integrity and honor to be done for us by some new app or a new law, but that's like thinking the wart on the big toe is the source of the brain cancer. Real social change comes from the ground up, not the top down. I explore these themes in my new book The Mythology of Progress, Anti-Progress and a Mythology for the 21st Century
(free sample chapter
)

New podcast: Seeking a Culture of Honor and Integrity with Emerson Fersch and Amy LeNoble (59 min) 

 




At readers' request, I've prepared a biography. I am not confident this is the right length or has the desired information; the whole project veers uncomfortably close to PR. On the other hand, who wants to read a boring bio? I am reminded of the "Peanuts" comic character Lucy, who once issued this terse biographical summary: "A man was born, he lived, he died." All undoubtedly true, but somewhat lacking in narrative.

I was raised in southern California as a rootless cosmopolitan: born in Santa Monica, and then towed by an upwardly mobile family to Van Nuys, Tarzana, Los Feliz and San Marino, where the penultimate conclusion of upward mobility, divorce and a shattered family, sent us to Big Bear Lake in the San Bernadino mountains.

 

 

charleshughsmith.blogspot.com

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