ARRA News Service
News Blog for social, fiscal & national security conservatives who believe in God, family & the USA. Upholding the rights granted by God & guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, traditional family values, "republican" principles / ideals, transparent & limited "smaller" government, free markets, lower taxes, due process of law, liberty & individual freedom. Content approval rests with the ARRA News Service Editor. Opinions are those of the authors. While varied positions are reported, beliefs & principles remain fixed. No revenue is generated for or by this "Blog" - no paid ads - no payments for articles. Fair Use Doctrine is posted & used.
Blogger/Editor/Founder: Bill Smith, Ph.D. [aka: OzarkGuru & 2010 AFP National Blogger of the Year]
Contact: editor@arranewsservice.com (Pub. Since July, 2006)
    Home Page
   

One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors. -- Plato (429-347 BC)

Friday, February 07, 2020

Free Markets Aren’t Everything: A Reflection On Parasite

by Anthony M. Barr: The South Korean director Bong Joon-ho’s Oscar-nominated film Parasite begins with a moment of late capitalism levity.

The Kim family, who live in a small, run-down basement apartment, discover that the upstairs tenants have put a password-lock on their Wi-Fi. The college-age son and daughter immediately panic, and their dad instructs them to hold the phones over their heads to try and grab another signal.

This laugh-out-loud scene slowly opens into something a bit more serious: we hear the mom tell them to check WhatsApp to see if the family was contacted about a job prospect. We quickly realize that the phones have no mobile service. The living situation is precarious, to put it mildly.

There is a narrative, beloved by Enlightenment liberals and free market conservatives alike, that goes something like this. It is absolutely foolish to be angry or depressed about the current state of the global economy, or fearful about the future. Free market capitalism has unleashed more prosperity than any other system at any other point in world history. Even most poor Americans have air conditioning and microwaves. The contemporary lower class lives better than the kings of antiquity: after all, the former can buy frozen chicken at a grocery store and flush their waste down a toilet. And look, the Kims all own smartphones!

This narrative is partially right. It is basically indisputable that, in absolute terms, material conditions have risen dramatically for basically everyone in the world, and this is due in large part to the efficiencies of market economies that produce consumer goods for cheap. And while we can talk about stagnant wages and leveled-off growth in highly developed nations like the United States, it is also a solid guess that the upward trajectory of improvement will continue in strictly material terms.

But the thing that pundits and policy wonks too often forget is that relative poverty matters, too, especially because poverty is never just about material conditions.

RELATIVE POVERTY
Let me tell you what I mean by relative poverty.

I remember when my family picked up bags of groceries from a church-run food bank after my dad was laid off by a company he had worked for, faithfully, for a decade. If memory serves me right, we only needed that kind of direct assistance a few times, and the period of unemployment was short enough, all things considered. But you don’t forget the shame. The feeling that maybe we just aren’t good enough. And the sense of isolation—that everyone else in America is making ends meet because they’re good enough, but we aren’t because we aren’t, and shh, don’t breathe a word, because you don’t want to increase the shame, but also because nobody else will understand. (A lot of people voted for Trump after Bernie didn’t get the nomination. Maybe it’s because Trump and Bernie are the only people who see us, value us, campaign for us, visit our communities, and speak to us of solidarity.)

But you also don’t forget the resentment over, the rage, that a company would get rid of a hard worker because it cared more about paying lower wages to increase profit margins than it did about my dad, about my family.

And then there’s that feeling of despair: if you do all the right things and it isn’t enough, then what’s the point? My dad would have worked there until retirement if he could have, and in my grandfather’s generation that would have been enough to secure him a comfortable retirement. But now? The point here is that we didn’t starve and we weren’t homeless and we still had a family Netflix account, but like I said, relative poverty hurts, too.

Parasite is also about the caretaking industry. The Kims work for the Parks: they cook the Parks’ meals and drive the Parks’ car and tutor the Park kids. (And sometimes they’re asked to dress up as an American Indian for the birthday party. Yes, it’s a little undignified, and also you don’t really have a choice, but we’ll pay you overtime.) Most contemporary dystopian stories suggest a world where the haves live in gated communities separated from the have-nots.

I think Parasite is more perceptive: caretaking is a booming industry that will only grow, and that means that the Kims and the Parks will brush shoulders almost constantly. What does it mean for the distance in perceived and afforded dignity—the confidence of extreme wealth and the desperate shame of precarious living—to bump up against each other? Isn’t it a powder keg situation? Is anyone besides the GDP-growth-fetishizers really surprised by the howling rage of the populist masses? How can we live as neighborly citizens in this kind of context?

THE PEOPLE WHO RIDE THE SUBWAY
In one of the most wrenching scenes of the film, the Kim family accidentally overhear the Park parents discussing how good a driver Mr. Kim is, or, well, at least how generally reliable. But there’s just the one thing, that he, well, he smells, well, he stinks. And you hear the caustic laughter juxtaposed with the sight of the shamed faces and the single tear rolling down Mr. Kim’s cheek. Mr. Park says that he smells like “the people who ride the subway.” Oh, yeah, did I mention that this is also a movie about class? (And when the pundits on Fox News talk about personal responsibility like my father didn’t bust his ass every day at that company, or the CNN pundits mock MAGA voters in a faux hick accent like it’s a matter of lower intelligence, they sound a lot like Mr. Park.) But damn, at least the Kim family have smartphones and a rotisserie chicken in their freezer!

I’ll show my cards.

Whatever you think of Trump—and frankly I have a number of grave concerns about his rhetoric and political approach—you need to understand the anger of his base. I have no doubt that abject poverty is a factor here, but I don’t think that’s the common denominator. The slights against human dignity are the common strand: being told that you are dumber, less valuable, that you stink, that you smell like a second-class citizen, that you are deplorable.

My own sense of economic justice was more deeply formed the day I watched the tortured expressions on my dad’s face when he told us he was let go than by any seminar course I took as a first-generation college student. You see this in the Kim kids, too, this sense of the anger sourced in large part in an empathy toward their hard-working father—a good man, a man of worth, a man who deserves so much better. So even when you hear the ambitions, see the desire to rise to a higher position in the meritocratic game, it’s not exactly a heart-warming tale of rags to riches. You shouldn’t have to be rich to be able to live without shame. You shouldn’t have to be rich for people to see your dignity and your worth.

I still believe in the power of (mostly) free markets to unleash greater and greater prosperity for the world. And I know that helping working families thrive requires more than cheap promises about free preschool and free college.

But I also believe that both absolute and relative poverty obscure our view of human dignity (in ourselves and in others), and encourage class divides that have less to do with who has Netflix and more to do with who is thought to have worth, who is thought to have a good life, who is honored, who is valued, who is loved.

The United States has a sordid history of injustices predicated on privileging one group over another, economically, culturally, racially. And yet I still believe that we can become a nation where Lady Liberty reaches her arms out in embrace, crying, “Give us your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.” And I still believe in the American Dream: not the one says that we can all become billionaires and should aspire to that, but rather the Dream that says that in our country, we can choose to honor each other not on the basis of race, religion, political party, or socioeconomic class, but rather on a shared recognition of our innate human dignity.

Parasite testifies to the horrors of a world in which people see themselves locked in a zero-sum game, and act accordingly, your gain always at my expense, my shame as the price for your honor. But we can do better than this, and we must, because the only alternative to the world of Parasite is a widespread commitment to solidarity with all Americans, and especially with those who are most vulnerable.
---------------------
Anthony Barr is a graduate of the Templeton Honors College at Eastern University, and a recent Fellow with the Hertog Foundation. H/T Intercollegiate Studies Institute.

Tags: Anthony Barr, Free Markets, Aren’t Everything, A Reflection On Parasite To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and "Like" Facebook Page - Thanks!
Posted by Bill Smith at 9:15 AM - Post Link

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home


View U.S. National Debt

Don't miss anything!
Subscribe to the
ARRA News Service
It's FREE & No Ads!

You will receive a verification email
& must validate you subscribed!

You Then Receive One Email Each AM
With Prior Days Articles / Toons / More


Also, Join & leave conservative posts & comments on
Facebook.com/ARRANewsService


Recent Posts:
Personal Tweets by the editor:
Dr. Bill - OzarkGuru - @arra
#Christian Conservative; Retired USAF & Grad Professor. Constitution NRA ProLife schoolchoice fairtax - Editor ARRA NEWS SERVICE. THANKS FOR FOLLOWING!

Action Links!
State Upper & Lower House Members
State Attorney Generals
State Governors
The White House
US House of Representatives
US Senators
GrassFire
NumbersUSA
Ballotpedia

Facebook Accts - Dr. Bill Smith
Pages:
ARRA News Service
Arkansans Against Big Government
Alley-White Am. Legion #52
Catholics & Protestants United Against Discrimination
End Taxpayer Funding of NPR
Overturn Roe V. Wade
Prolife Soldiers
Project Wildfire 4 Life
Republican Liberty Caucus of Arkansas
The Gold Standard
US Atty Gen Loretta Lynch, aka Eric Holder, Must Go
Veterans for Sarah Palin
Why Vote for Hillary (Satire)
FB Groups:
Arkansas For Sarah Palin
Arkansas Conservative Caucus
Arkansas County Tea Party
Arkansans' Discussion Group on National Issues
Blogs for Borders
Conservative Solutions
Conservative Voices
Defend Marriage -- Arkansas
FairTax
FairTax Nation
Arkansas for FairTax
Friends of the TEA Party in Arkansas
Freedom Roundtable
Pro-Life Rocks - Arkansas
Republican Network
Republican Liberty Caucus of AR
Reject the U.N.

Patriots
Exchange
Links

Request Via
Article Comment

Links to ARRA News
A Patriotic Nurse
Agora Associates
a12iggymom's Blog
America, You Asked For It!
America's Best Choice
ARRA News Twitter
As The Crackerhead Crumbles
Blogs For Borders
Blogs for Palin
Blow the Trumpet Ministry
Boot Berryism
Cap'n Bob & the Damsel
Chicago Ray Report - Obama Regime Report
Chuck Baldwin - links
Common Cents
Conservative Voices
Diana's Corner
Greater Fitchburg For Life
Lasting Liberty Blog
Liberal Isn't Amy
Marathon Pundit
Patriot's Corner
Right on Issues that Matter
Right Reason
Rocking on the Right Side
Saber Point
Saline Watchdog
Sultan Knish
The Blue Eye View
The Born Again Americans
TEA Party Cartoons
The Foxhole | Unapologetic Patriot
The Liberty Republican
The O Word
The Path to Tyranny Blog
The Real Polichick
The War on Guns
TOTUS
Twitter @ARRA
Underground Notes
Warning Signs
Women's Prayer & Action
WyBlog

Editor's Managed Twitter Accounts
Twitter Dr. Bill Smith @arra
Twitter Arkansas @GOPNetwork
Twitter @BootBerryism
Twitter @SovereignAllies
Twitter @FairTaxNation

Editor's Recommended Orgs
Accuracy in Media (AIM)
American Action Forum (AAF)
American Committment
American Culture & Faith Institute
American Enterprise Institute
American Family Business Institute
Americans for Limited Government
Americans for Prosperity
Americans for Tax Reform
American Security Council Fdn
AR Faith & Ethics Council
Arkansas Policy Foundation
Ayn Rand Institute
Bill of Rights Institute
Campaign for Working Families
CATO Institute
Center for Individual Freedom
Center for Immigration Studies
Center for Just Society
Center for Freedom & Prosperity
Citizens Against Gov't Waste
Citizens in Charge Foundstion
Coalition for the Future American Worker
Competitive Enterprise Institute
Concerned Veterans for America
Concerned Women for America
Declaration of Am. Renewal
Eagle Forum
FairTax
Family Research Council
Family Security Matters
Franklin Center for Gov't & Public Integrity
Freedom Works
Gingrich Productions
Global Incident Map
Great Americans
Gold Standard 2012 Project
Gun Owners of America (GOA)
Heritage Action for America
David Horowitz Freedom Center
Institute For Justice
Institute for Truth in Accounting
Intercollegiate Studies Institute
Judicial Watch
Less Government
Media Reseach Center
National Center for Policy Analysis
National Right To Work Foundation
National Rifle Association (NRA)
National Rifle Association (NRA-ILA)
News Busters
O'Bluejacket's Patriotic Flicks
OathKeepers
Open Secrets
Presidential Prayer Team
Religious Freedom Coalition
Renew America
Ron Paul Institute
State Policy Network
Tax Foundation
Tax Policy Center
The Club for Growth
The Federalist
The Gold Standard Now
The Heritage Foundation
The Leadership Institute
Truth in Accounting
Union Facts



Blogs For Borders

Reject the United Nations

Presidential Prayer Team

Thousands of Deadly Islamic Terror Attacks Since 9/11


FairTax Nation on FaceBook
Friends of Israel - Stand with Israel
Blog Feeds
Syndicated - Get the ARRA News Service feed Syndicated!
ARRA Blog Feed

Add to Google Reader or Homepage

Add to The Free Dictionary

Powered by Blogger


  • To Exchange Links - Email: editor@arranewsservice.com!
  • Comments by contributing authors or other sources do not necessarily reflect the position the editor, other contributing authors, sources, readers, or commenters. No contributors, or editors are paid for articles, images, cartoons, etc. While having reported on and promoting principles & beleifs beliefs of other organizations, this blog/site is soley controlled and supported by the editor. This site/blog does not advertise for money or services nor does it solicit funding for its support.
  • Fair Use: This site/blog may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material is made available to advance understanding of political, human rights, economic, democracy, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a 'fair use' of such copyrighted material as provided for in section Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107 of the US Copyright Law. Per said section, the material on this site/blog is distributed without profit to readers to view for the expressed purpose of viewing the included information for research, educational, or satirical purposes. Any person/entity seeking to use copyrighted material shared on this site/blog for purposes that go beyond "fair use," must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
  • © 2006 - 2020 ARRA News Service
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.