Arathain Kelvar wrote:
SuiNeko wrote:
2011 London riots showed that is not the case. Well fed, housed, bored underclass burned and looted, and only state force broke it down, after 3 days. That's not revolution, but it puts informed self interest in another light.
Interesting counter-point. It certainly does disagree. It was certainly a head-scratcher. I'm also not sure that they were looking to change the system significantly. Did they ever figure out a coherent motive? Just teen angst? Was it driven by the wealth gap alone?
I have to admit, while I watched the riots unfold, I really didn't understand the point.
I believe it is a combination of things:
Underclass with no visceral understanding of how good their lives are compared to those of Europeans 300 years ago, or those in feudal/famine conditions elsewhere within the world today
Food, heating, shelter available - but shitty, stratified from the main, and consumer luxuries out of reach
Constant advertising and entertainment reinforcement of how fantastic it is for others
A society that largely segments social classes, whereby little real engagement or conversation takes place between the higher and lower ends of the wealth spectrum
Frustration at the idea that they'll never have the iPod/Audi/holiday that is being set up as aspirational
Boredom
A lack of long term understanding/caring/thinking about what the destruction of the social order would mean for general availability of food, water, heat, etc
So, a sense of frustrated entitlement, little understanding of absolute wealth or poverty in the world, little appreciation of consequence of removing the insulators from the reality of the world
As I said - it's not revolution, but it is a counterpoint to the idea that relative wealth has no part to play in social stability, safety, etc. If you buy my hypothesis above, it's absolutely frustrated status and opportunity that drives violence, even for those with shelter and food.
There's probably also a cultural lack of belief that hard work is sufficient to make it; heavy industries shut down, mining and steel and shipbuilding gone. Work hard all your life to be a checkout teller while others do half the hours and lounge around on yachts.
Americans may still tend to have more belief in entrepreneurial success being widely available rather than lottery like freak outliers.