| 
			 
 
			 from Eudaimonia Website 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 How Capitalism Became Young People's 
			Pusher, Pimp, 
			and Abuser... 
			 
 
			Nobody I know under the 
			age of 40 or so can make it anymore. That applies to people over 40 
			as well, of course  -  but as we'll see, an economy's fate hinges in 
			many ways on young people. 
 Young people can't make ends meet. They can't earn decent livings. Hence, they can't save. Because they can't save, they can't buy homes. Because they can't buy homes, they can't start families. Because they can't start families, they can't move out. 
 Because they're stuck living in their parents' homes, they're depressed, frustrated, and furious. 
 Hence, the rise of the "side-hustle", but I digress - let's think about the meaning of all this. 
 Capitalism has trapped young people in a kind of never-ending adolescence - during which it stalks them, like prey. It never lets them grow up - while telling them to, 
 Like a monster, it traps them, isolates them, and picks them off one by one, when they're at their weakest - for their sweet flesh. Wham! 
 
			The dystopian tales of 
			this age aren't so far off the truth. Young people are kept in this 
			state of perpetual adolescence so that they can be exploited 
			with maximum, perfect efficiency  -  until they have nothing left, 
			and then they're disposed of. 
 Alas, my friend, a brief glimpse at basic socioeconomic realities suggests that if anything, I'm understating the case. 
 Depression and suicide are soaring amongst the young. 
 
			A life as good as Dad's? 
			Grandma's? LOL  -  it's a distant dream. 
 They aren't just against it. They mock it just like a child might say: 
 They hold in contempt and scorn and disgrace. They should. 
 Young people are giving up on capitalism because capitalism has failed them. Beneath this grotesque veneer of dystopian inevitability lies a deeper truth. 
 Young people sit at the intersection of three great economic shocks - ones which no generation, really, has had to face before. 
 
			When you're paying $10K a 
			year for healthcare… per person… the idea of having kids, starting a 
			family, buying a home becomes a bitter, twisted joke. 
 If they have affluent families, they endlessly tap them for the support they desperately need. Dad! I need to pay rent. Mom! I need to pay for healthcare! Uncle Dan! Can you help me with my car payment? And so on... 
 
			There's no shame in it, 
			but because we feel so ashamed of it, we don't discuss it  -  young 
			people are on life support these days, my friends  -  even the 
			responsible and productive ones. 
 What do they do? Well, a lot of them have turned to drugs. Sure, young people always take drugs (hi, 22 year old Umair.) 
 
			But there's a big 
			difference between a spliff here and there and a helpless 
			dependency on opioids because you're stuck in a dead end life in 
			some rust belt town. Young people are medicating away the pain of 
			capitalism, essentially. 
 The rise of camgirls and online-escorting-to-pay-for-grad-school and so on is one example. There's nothing wrong with sex work, and if you choose it, great - but my feeling is that many women aren't choosing it so much as they're being compelled into it by financial hardship. 
 That's a common feature, too, of collapsing societies - their women have to sell their bodies to support their men and themselves - hence, we Americans make fun of the Eastern European sex industry, Thai child prostitutes, mail order brides, but we don't quite connect the dots - that's what capitalism is doing now to our women, too. 
 
			It's another thing we 
			don't discuss, because we're too busy lionizing sex work to wonder: 
			is it just a coincidence sex is being commodified and harvested for 
			profit in more extreme forms, at the precise moment our society's 
			collapsing? 
 While those gigs might help drive "down" the unemployment rate, it's an illusion, at best - because you can't do it forever. 
 It's not just not a career - it's the opposite of one: an activity that invests nothing in your human or emotional or social capital. It's another way to sell your body, essentially - because you can't develop your mind, heart, or soul. 
 
			That's not to say people 
			don't pay for school with Uber or camming or so forth  
			-  sure they do  -  the point is: should they have to? What does it 
			cost us all when those are the choices on offer? 
 They are selling the very last things they have - their bodies, their muscles, the most desperate forms of labour, from sex work to menial work. 
 These forms of labour are of course the lowest paid, and the most predatory, too. Young people are being forced to sell their bodies to the lowest bidder - instead of having their minds, hearts, and spirits nourished, nurtured, and cultivated. 
 
			What else is a serf, 
			really, but someone who is compelled to sell their physical labour 
			in the most menial way they can  -  instead of being able to develop 
			themselves more fully, their minds, creativity, intellects, 
			aspirations, imaginations? Isn't that why the world went nowhere for 
			centuries? 
 It keeps them trapped in a perpetual adolescence - never allowing them to grow up, afford homes, start families, become genuine adults of their own. Then, cleverly, it asks them to sell the only thing they are allowed to have, since they cannot really grow up - their bodies, their sweat, their tendons and muscles. 
 Once those are exploited to the maximum - bang! The commodity is disposed of... 
 Does a camgirl get a retirement plan? Healthcare? What's the Uber driver's career model? You see my point, perhaps. 
 
			Young people are kept a 
			perpetual adolescence by capitalism because there is little more 
			profitable than a kept class of fresh, smiling serfs and servants to 
			pimp out  -  who are always a tap and swipe away. 
 It is not the gentle hand which nourishes them into adulthood. I mean all that quite literally. 
 
 
			 
 
 When I said capitalism was preying on young people, this is what I meant - it traps them in a perpetual adolescence, where they're kept young, and then picks them off, one by one, for prettiness and health and strength of their bodies, more or less. 
 Capitalism has made young people nobodies, going nowhere, because there's nowhere to go. 
 There's just a perpetual adolescence, during which you're exploited ruthlessly for the things you have when you're young - muscles, sweat, energy, a fresh body - and then discarded like trash, once those things are even faintly scarred, abused, marked. Wham! Time to exploit the next line of young people. 
 
			For their bodies, smiles, 
			tendons, flesh  -  the only things people trapped in an endless 
			adolescence can have  -  until those are not so fresh and lithe 
			anymore. 
 It's true that some of those might emerge, but by and large, they are becoming servants now. 
 Concubines and chauffeurs and cleaners and "assistants", 40 year old interns, opioid addicts, internet burnouts, people who've never had a decent job in their lives, youngsters approaching middle-age who still live with Mom and Dad because there's nowhere to go. 
 
			People who, in the end, 
			might just be growing accustomed and resigned to being ruthlessly 
			exploited for the sweet taste of youth by the old, the rich, the 
			predatory, even as they rage into their screens against the machine 
			that preys on them. 
 They are like algorithmic servants, whose primary purpose in life is to sell their youthful bodies - not to develop their minds - in whatever increasingly desperate way they can find. Driving a car, doing a cam show, cleaning a home, and so on. 
 Another way to see it is that young people are something like janitors of desire. They are there to clean up after the messes society's appetites make. Want to get laid? Need some plumbing? Just swipe! Ahh, sweet relief. 
 Maybe you see what I mean... 
 
			Young people are servants 
			and prisoners of desire now  -  a caste of menial pleasure-workers, 
			always there on-demand, to service you…which is what servants have 
			always been. 
 You see, something very grave and vital is lost when we pimp out our own young people to capitalism, or when capitalism becomes their pusher, pimp, and sweatshop boss. 
 Those young people don't turn into tomorrow's Einsteins, Salks, and Malalas. Not at nearly the same rate. 
 They give up on democracy and freedom - enough of them sit at home burned out and high and depressed and sucidal, instead of voting and marching. 
 They become traumatized and wounded. So much so that perhaps they buy into the mechanisms of their own oppression - hey, Facebook's good for me! Don't take my Uber away! 
 
			You can hardly blame 
			them, after all  -  where else do they have to turn, but to 
			oppression, for the means of subsistence? 
 I'll never really let you develop your mind, your heart, your soul. 
 
			In this way, capitalism 
			is something very much like the boogeyman, my friends. It is all the 
			archaic monsters dwelling in our unconscious in this way  -  preying 
			on our children in the darkness where only an algorithm glimmers, 
			stealing away their youth while they sleep, making them old before 
			they have ever really been young. 
 They are rebelling against capitalism, because capitalism has failed them, in all these terrible and gruesome ways, which have yet, I think, really to be understood. 
 That should give us all a little hope. The young have always been the wisest among us. 
 
			And in their vehement 
			rejection of capitalism  -  even if they don't quite still know the 
			depths to which it has abased and disgraced them  -  they are better 
			and truer leaders than they know. 
  |