{"id":3500347,"date":"2024-03-27T08:49:25","date_gmt":"2024-03-27T08:49:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/?p=3500347"},"modified":"2024-04-03T07:59:01","modified_gmt":"2024-04-03T07:59:01","slug":"crazy-town-episode-81-escaping-consumerism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/stories\/2024-03-27\/crazy-town-episode-81-escaping-consumerism\/","title":{"rendered":"Crazy Town 81. Escaping Consumerism: Why Crocheted Codpieces Are the Perfect Antidote to Fast Fashion"},"content":{"rendered":"<div style=\"height:15px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer\"><\/div><div id=\"buzzsprout-player-14679947\"><\/div><script src=\"https:\/\/www.buzzsprout.com\/244372\/14679947-escaping-consumerism-why-crocheted-codpieces-are-the-perfect-antidote-to-fast-fashion.js?container_id=buzzsprout-player-14679947&#038;player=small\" type=\"text\/javascript\" charset=\"utf-8\"><\/script><div class=\"gb-button-wrapper gb-button-wrapper-af35d9a5\">\n<a class=\"gb-button gb-button-736fa41c gb-button-text btn res-btn-blue\" href=\"https:\/\/lnk.to\/crazytownWB\">Listen on your favorite app<\/a>\n\n<a class=\"gb-button gb-button-f8db5292 gb-button-text res-btn-yellow\" href=\"\/crazy-town-podcast\/episodes\">See all episodes<\/a>\n<\/div><div class=\"gb-container gb-container-b18365bc\">\n<p><strong>Show notes<\/strong><\/p>\n\n<p>If American consumers ever come up for air under the pile of crap in their storage units, they find themselves face to face with a materialistic hellscape of megastores, McMansions, endless fleets of delivery trucks, and evil hordes of targeted ads. But help is on the way. Jason, Rob, and Asher present ideas for shaping up a world beyond consumerism.<br><br>Warning: This podcast occasionally uses spicy language.<\/p>\n\n<p><strong>Sources\/Links\/Notes:<\/strong><\/p>\n\n<ul class=\"wp-block-list\"><li>The original (and both catchy and annoying) <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=LMd8qmBmTkg\">Toys \u201cR\u201d Us theme song<\/a><\/li>\n\n<li>The melancholy <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=VvTplYFJUFQ\">remake of the theme song<\/a> for a bankrupt Toys \u201cR\u201d Us, performed by Chase Holfelder<\/li>\n\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/css.umich.edu\/publications\/factsheets\/material-resources\/us-material-use-factsheet\">U.S. Material Use Factsheet<\/a><\/li>\n\n<li>United Nations <a href=\"https:\/\/unstats.un.org\/sdgs\/report\/2019\/goal-12\/\">statistics on material footprint<\/a><\/li>\n\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.storagecafe.com\/self-storage-industry-statistics\/\">Self storage industry trends<\/a><\/li>\n\n<li><a href=\"https:\/\/www.unep.org\/news-and-stories\/story\/environmental-costs-fast-fashion\">The environmental costs of fast fashion<\/a><\/li>\n\n<li>Story by Beth Porter, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.greenamerica.org\/unraveling-fashion-industry\/what-really-happens-unwanted-clothes\">What Really Happens to Unwanted Clothes?<\/a>\u201d<\/li>\n\n<li><em>Forbes<\/em> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.forbes.com\/billionaires\/\">list of billionaires<\/a><\/li>\n\n<li>George Carlin\u2019s classic <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=MvgN5gCuLac\">comedic bit about \u201cstuff\u201d<\/a><\/li>\n\n<li>Sandra Goldmark\u2019s book <a href=\"https:\/\/sandragoldmark.com\/book\"><em>Fixation: How to Have Stuff without Breaking the Planet<\/em><\/a><\/li><\/ul>\n<\/div><div class=\"wp-block-pb-accordion-item c-accordion__item js-accordion-item no-js\" data-initially-open=\"false\" data-click-to-close=\"true\" data-auto-close=\"true\" data-scroll=\"false\" data-scroll-offset=\"0\"><h2 id=\"at-35003470\" class=\"c-accordion__title js-accordion-controller\" role=\"button\">Transcript<\/h2><div id=\"ac-35003470\" class=\"c-accordion__content\"><pre class=\"wp-block-preformatted\">Jason Bradford  \nHi, I'm Jason Bradford.\n\nAsher Miller  \nI'm Asher Miller.\n\nRob Dietz  \nAnd I'm Rob Dietz. Welcome to Crazy Town, where we buy stuff we don't need with money we don't have to impress people we don't like.\n\nMelody Allison  \nHey, this is Crazy Town producer Melody Allison. Thanks for listening. Here in Season 6, we're exploring escape route pathways that just might get us out of Crazy Town. In today's episode, Jason, Rob, and Asher are escaping consumerism. And here's a quick warning. Sometimes this podcast uses swear words. Language! If you like what you're hearing, please let some friends know about Crazy Town. Now on to the show. \n\nRob Dietz  \nHey, so sometimes I like to think of Crazy Town as a bit of therapy. So I would like to share a traumatic story of my past with you two to open this episode.\n\nAsher Miller  \nAre you going to do your Freud kinda - \n\nJason Bradford  \n\"Hey man, whatever.\"\n\nAsher Miller  \nThat's not how Freud spoke. \n\nJason Bradford  \nOh, okay. \n\nAsher Miller  \n\"Tell me about your mother.\" I don't know -- I sound Latino. That was pathetic.\n\nRob Dietz  \nThis therapy session is off the rails already. \n\nJason Bradford  \nSo Rob, I want you to know, it's not what's wrong with you, it's what happened to you.\n\nRob Dietz  \nOkay, thank you. \n\nJason Bradford  \nTell me. \n\nRob Dietz  \nOkay, so when I was a 17 year old about to embark on my college career, I needed to get some money to help pay for said college. So I really was a fan of North Lake Mall, which was near my house. \n\nJason Bradford  \nI had Valco Fashion Mall as my stomping grounds. \n\nRob Dietz  \nOkay, wow. Valco fashion, that's a good one. But a newer better strip mall opened up across the street from North Lake Mall. It was called North Lake Tower Festival. \n\nAsher Miller  \nYou know, there must have been a deep story between the owners of those two. Like, to open it directly across the street is like a big fuck you, don't you think?\n\nRob Dietz  \nI know. I know. It's rough. Well --\n\nAsher Miller  \nSomebody pissed somebody else off earlier\n\nRob Dietz  \nThe anchor store at North Lake Tower Festival was Toys  R  Us. \n\nAsher Miller  \nThat was the anchor store? \n\nRob Dietz  \nAnd you know, as a 17 year old, I liked playing with toys .\n\nJason Bradford  \nNo, you must have outgrown it by then. It must have been horrible.\n\nAsher Miller  \nHave you met Rob?\n\nRob Dietz  \nI was always a little behind, alright?\n\nAsher Miller  \nIt took him until he was 29 get over that.\n\nRob Dietz  \nRight. I still can get a good Star Wars scenario going with my action figures. So you guys know Toys  R  Us. Let me just play for you the ubiquitous, at that time, theme song\n\nAsher Miller  \nYou don't need to play it for us.\n\nJason Bradford  \nI don't actually remember it. \n\nAsher Miller  \nYou'll remember it as soon as you hear it.\n\nRob Dietz  \nI'm going to play it. Yeah, listen to this: &lt;\"Toys  R  Us\" Theme Song plays&gt;\n\nJason Bradford  \nDoesn't ring a bell. That's a shitty jingle if I can't remember it. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYou don't recognize that?  \n\nJason Bradford  \nNo. \n\nAsher Miller  \nI think there's something wrong with you. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's incredible. I'm amazed.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, well, so I had to listen to that song on repeat all day long. Every day. \n\nAsher Miller  \nWait, they would play that in the store? \n\nRob Dietz  \nThey would play that in the store, and they would play Carly Simon tunes. \n\nJason Bradford  \nMy mirror neurons are in pain right now.\n\nRob Dietz  \nSo one of the things about the Toys  R  Us is that just the sheer length, height, width of the store was incredible. The colors, like the pink Barbie aisle. It was just like kind of an explosion of your senses. And the thing about it it was really good, like I said, I wanted to get money for college. I made $4 an hour.\n\nAsher Miller  \nOh my God, you were just rolling in it. \n\nRob Dietz  \nAnd what I remember about that that summer --\n\nAsher Miller  \nThey were paying kid salaries.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, that's right.\n\nJason Bradford  \nIt was an allowance.\n\nRob Dietz  \nSo this is the thing, I remember just wanting out the whole summer. Like I didn't want to be there. My favorite parts of the day were when I could hide out in the warehouse and just stock diapers or whatever, you know? I wouldn't have to be out on that floor. Closing time was awesome. \n\nAsher Miller  \nWait, they were selling diapers? \n\nRob Dietz  \nOh yeah, diapers and baby formula were huge there.\n\nAsher Miller  \nGotta run to the Toys  R  Us to get my diapers.\n\nJason Bradford  \nThey were toy diapers. \n\nAsher Miller  \nRight, for little stuffed animals. \n\nJason Bradford  \nBarbie diapers and stuff.\n\nAsher Miller  \nOh those are really small. \n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd Cabbage Patch Kids. I remember those.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, closing time was also a favorite despite the mess the store was. Imagine how messy a Toys  R  Us gets by the end of the day.\n\nAsher Miller  \nBecause kids are taking stuff out and then just dropping it off on the floor. \n\nRob Dietz  \nOne of my favorite things to do there was send people elsewhere. So I remember one time, they used to sell Huffy bikes and this guy came in he's like, \"Hey, I was thinking about getting a bike for my daughter. What do you recommend?\" And I was like, \"I recommend you go to the bike store.\"\n\nJason Bradford  \nRight, because those bikes will break.\n\nRob Dietz  \nI was also just a 17 year old ass.\n\nAsher Miller  \nI guess you weren't getting paid on commission.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, well and then of course Toys  R  Us went bankrupt in 2018. And there's a guy --\n\nJason Bradford  \nProbably couldn't pay his medical bills. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, there's a guy named Chase Holfelder who recorded a remake of the Toys  R  Us song that I want to play for you guys. Check this one out: &lt;Song plays&gt;\n\nRob Dietz  \nA day that will live in infamy. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's actually good. I like that. I like that.\n\nAsher Miller  \nSo sad. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, he turned it into a dirge, right. It's like the death of Toys  R  Us. It's really incredible.\n\nAsher Miller  \nWell, that jingle will live on in our brains until we die. \n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, you know, despite the soft spot I've got in my heart for Legos and Star Wars, action figures and vintage video games and stuff like that, the Toys  R  Us mega store was a really good example of, well, our topic today: Over the top consumerism where you're enticed to buy a bunch of plastic crap that you don't need. Let's not even talk about the advertising that comes along with that. At least not yet. \n\nAsher Miller  \nDo you think that you became less of a consumerist fuckface after working there?\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, probably. I mean, I think the reason I'm in therapy with you guys right now is like trying to shake that stuff off.\n\nAsher Miller  \nWell, I'm grateful. I'm grateful to your summer at Toys  R  Us.\n\nJason Bradford  \nSo I think we should traumatize our audience now.\n\nRob Dietz  \nAs we do. \n\nJason Bradford  \nWith giving them the Crazy Town kind of statistics related to consumerism.\n\nAsher Miller  \nDo we tell people that we're actually being underwritten by the American Therapy Association?\n\nRob Dietz  \nAnd we're sponsored by Toys  R  Us. Buy our bankrupt toys.\n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah, yeah.\n\nAsher Miller  \nThey're paying us in old toys.\n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah. Anyway. Okay. So in 2019, U.S. per capita total material consumption -- This is including fuels so this is an important thing -- was 23.75, let's just round it up to 24 metric tons per person. That's per capita.\n\nAsher Miller  \n24 metric tons, okay. \n\nRob Dietz  \nSo in 2019, I use 24 metric tons of crap per year?\n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah, and that includes fuels. And more than half of that is actually oil, coal, and natural gas. Stuff that we just combust, right?\n\nRob Dietz  \nOh, so that's good. Only half of it was Barbies and Star Wars action figures.\n\nAsher Miller  \nSo that's like a dozen cars in weight. \n\nJason Bradford  \nPretty freaking gigantic, right? This is 88% higher than in Europe, right, which has comparable if not better standards. \n\nAsher Miller  \nLosers.\n\nJason Bradford  \nNow, what's interesting for me to think about is that in the last 100 years or so, the use of renewable materials, what is considered like wood or natural fibers. That has decreased dramatically. It went from 41% of the total materials by weight to 5%. So 95% of what we now are, quote unquote, \"consuming\" is non-renewable materials. \n\nRob Dietz  \nGreat, great.\n\nJason Bradford  \nI mean 41% wasn't that great. And that's because there's minerals like you know, rock and sand. These things, they don't regrow. You mine this stuff out. It was still like 60% of the U.S. economy 100 years ago. Now, what's interesting to think about it is you talk about the plastics in the toy store and stuff, but currently about 80% of the non fuel consumption of materials goes towards construction. It's like freeways expanding, the malls that the Toys  R  Us goes in.\n\nRob Dietz  \nAll the houses of suburban sprawl.\n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd also houses are getting bigger. So in 1920 to 2014, the average floor area at a U.S. home increased from a little over 1,000 square feet to almost 2,700 square feet. \n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, that's progress, right? \n\nAsher Miller  \nWait a second. I'm feeling bad about myself now. Because when I moved from California here, I had a 1,200 square foot house in California, and I doubled the size of my house which is insane. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYou're just trying to keep up with the times.\n\nAsher Miller  \nNo, we re not even keeping up. That's still smaller.\n\nJason Bradford  \nYou're still below, or you're still smaller than average of the current new house. But here's what's interesting, you've got your four people in your home.\n\nAsher Miller  \nYes. And a dog. \n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd a dog. So the average U.S. home actually now has 2.5 people. \n\nAsher Miller  \nOh, sweet. \n\nJason Bradford  \nWell, but you're behind because . . . \n\nAsher Miller  \nOh, if we actually think about it per person --\n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah, you're behind. \n\nAsher Miller  \nWe're way behind. \n\nJason Bradford  \nBut if you do the math, like there are more is more people living per home in 1920 than there is today, right? So actually, per capita today, everyone has the equivalent of what a family of four had together in 1920.\n\nRob Dietz  \nAgain, thank you for reporting statistics of progress. I want to take you guys to sort of a culmination of consumerist culture. You know, you're talking about the houses getting bigger. And of course with a bigger house, you've got to fill it with more stuff, I guess. But it starts overflowing. So what do you do? \n\nAsher Miller  \nIt's hard to get the balance right, you know.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWell this is why America is so ingenious. You go rent a self storage unit where you can keep your excess stuff. So I got a bunch of stats on self storage. So we're gonna play two truths and a lie. I'm going to read you three statistics, one of which I made up. And you guys try to, you know, try to suss out what it is. \n\nJason Bradford  \nOkay. \n\nRob Dietz  \nOkay. Here's one: We've got greater than 1.8 billion square feet of self storage space in the U.S. That's approximately the size of Washington DC. Okay, there's one stat for you. No calculating. This is all intuition. Jason's reaching for a calculator.\n\nJason Bradford  \nOkay, I'm just doing the per capita. That seems reasonable. \n\nRob Dietz  \nDo it in your head. \n\nJason Bradford  \nI did. \n\nRob Dietz  \nOkay. Stat number two: Public storage, which is the very generic name of the largest self storage company in the United States -- You can get that under New York Stock Exchange abbreviation PSA. \n\nRob Dietz  \nBuying some. Buying some. Yeah, so this company Public Storage was the fastest growing company in the United States during the aughts. So from 2000 to 2009. Okay? Here's your third stat: There are 50,000 self storage facilities in the U.S., a number that is more than the combined total of subway Starbucks and Walgreens outlets. \n\nJason Bradford  \nMy gosh. \n\nAsher Miller  \nWhoa. \n\nRob Dietz  \nThose are your three stats. \n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd we're supposed to figure out which was is wrong? \n\nRob Dietz  \nOne is false.\n\nAsher Miller  \nSo let me first commend you. He did a pretty good job of coming up with these. I mean, they're all insane. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThey're all insane. And I could believe any of them. This is a problem for me. \n\nAsher Miller  \nSee, I'm smart. So I have a theory here. But no, you go first Jason.\n\nJason Bradford  \nI'm gonna say the 50,000 one is -- just hit that number is t0o round. And it's just you know, Subway, Starbucks, Walgreens, so convenient. That's bullshit. I'm calling you on it.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWow. I hate my voice when you're mimicking it.\n\nAsher Miller  \nI am gonna say it's the second one. And here's why -- Because you said the aughts. That was a period of great growth for a lot of companies. So maybe Public Storage wasn't growing a lot. But you know -- \n\nJason Bradford  \nA lot of stuff was growing. \n\nAsher Miller  \nI mean, isn't that when Facebook came online. Even Starbucks I bet was growing faster. There was this great Onion headline which was, \"Starbucks' next growth strategy is opening Starbucks in their own bathrooms.\" I mean, they were growing like mad. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThere's like pictures of Starbucks kitty corner to each other on the same block. That was just ridiculous.\n\nAsher Miller  \nSo I'm gonna say it's the second one.\n\nRob Dietz  \nOkay. Well, I'm gonna tell you, and I hate this, because Asher you premised all that with saying, \"I'm smart.\" And it turns out you are. So just for once in his life we've corroborated his intelligence.\n\nAsher Miller  \nDunning Kruger has nothing on me.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, I kind of thought that could have been a giveaway. Because yeah, like, that's when the tech boom really was taking off, too. So well, can we just look at the public storage, the self storage, as being emblematic of this acceleration in consumerism\n\nJason Bradford  \nSure, let's pick an emblem.\n\nRob Dietz  \nI mean, here's a real stat again: In 1984, there were 6,600 self storage facilities in the U.S., and now there's 50,000 of them. I mean . . . \n\nAsher Miller  \nThat's progress. Something I read was that 65% of the people who have self storage also have a garage. \n\nJason Bradford  \nOf course. It's not like the walk up apartment in New York City. \n\nAsher Miller  \nExactly, it's not like, I downsized, I have a small space, I need to have storage or whatever. \n\nJason Bradford  \nI live on a boat. \n\nAsher Miller  \nExactly. 65% of them have a fucking garage.\n\nJason Bradford  \nProbably a three car garage. \n\nRob Dietz  \nHey, the garage is sacred space for the car. \n\nAsher Miller  \nRight. Of course. We shouldn't even consider it as something that you can -- \n\nJason Bradford  \nYou can store a lot of stuff in your car, too.\n\nAsher Miller  \nYou talked about self storage as being kind of emblematic. I think that what's happened with fashion, in the acceleration of what people are calling fast fashion, that's actually really telling in terms of what's been happening with consumers. And because, you know, the truth is, and we've talked about this before, consumers kinda became the sort of staple of the American economy and the global economy. Decades and decades and decades ago was sort of a born out of industrialization and overproduction of stuff. They started advertising, and loans and all the things that they did to kind of make it possible for people to buy shit, right. So we've been on that path for a while. But there's an acceleration that's happening. And fashion is really interesting. So here's my turn to do stats. In 2015 according to True Costs, the world consumes around 80 billion new pieces of clothing every year. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's like 10 per person worldwide.\n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah, a little bit more. And that's 4% more than 20 years ago.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, just saying internally, externally, that's not helping my therapy session, okay? It's going to get worse. \n\nJason Bradford  \nIt always gets worse. \n\nAsher Miller  \nPeople are now buying 60% more clothes and wearing them for half as long as they used to. Okay?\n\nRob Dietz  \nI take mine off by noon every day.\n\nAsher Miller  \nExactly. And we're not just talking about, you know, superstar singers changing their outfits on stage. 30% of all the clothes made globally are never actually worn. \n\nJason Bradford  \nOh that's sad. \n\nRob Dietz  \nWhat are you doing with them? \n\nAsher Miller  \nI don't know. They just --\n\nJason Bradford  \nThey must be in self storage units. \n\nAsher Miller  \nThey probably don't sell. Actually, that's a good question. How many of them are sold and never worn versus just never sold? Yeah, good question. And then, let's just talk about some of the environmental impacts. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah cuz why not? Let's get really depressed here. \n\nAsher Miller  \nTextile waste is the fastest growing part of the waste stream in the United States. \n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd that's why we're highlighting it. \n\nAsher Miller  \nThis is so fantastic. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYou know when you're paddling down the river in a canoe and it's just shirts and pants, and you can barely get the canoe through all of that. It's the worst. \n\nAsher Miller  \nSadly, in some places in the world it's kind of like that. In the U.S., 80% of us clothing is either sent to the landfill or incinerated. So people think when they donate clothing or they return clothing, whatever, it goes to another home that's in need, you know. Whether it's in the U.S. or somewhere else, but 80% of it. \n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah, cuz most of it's probably pretty crappy. \n\nAsher Miller  \nLet's talk about some of the social implications. Kind of the injustice of it. So who would you think is the richest man in the world? Who comes to mind when you think of the richest person?\n\nRob Dietz  \nWell in our Phalse Prophets season, we had the Elon Musk episode about Elon Musk brought to you by Elon Musk. I would guess him. \n\nJason Bradford  \nNo, not anymore. He's been canceled so much because of his outlandish behavior. \n\nAsher Miller  \nHe's still number two. \n\nJason Bradford  \nHe's still number two? Wow. \n\nAsher Miller  \nSo according to Forbes, Elon is still number two. Bezos is up there. The wealthiest person in the world is Bernard Arnault, a Frenchman. He made all his wealth in fashion and luxury goods. He's worth about $180 billion. \n\nJason Bradford  \nWow. \n\nRob Dietz  \nSweet. \n\nAsher Miller  \nThe fashion industry is actually one of the largest employers in the entire world, globally. Something like 75 million people are employed by it. According to Nonprofit Remake, 80% of apparel is made by young women, so ages 18 to 24, around the world. Often working in dangerous working conditions, getting paid for very low pay. So you know, the contrast between Arnault and the reality for many, many primarily young women in our world producing these things that people don't wear.\n\nJason Bradford  \nWell, I think when we think about fashion you often think about something that is stylish. Or you know, some designer has gone through . . . But a lot of it is complete junk. Like you know, what's driving me crazy, I've noticed is that all the sports teams now have a new uniform, a new hat, for almost everything, every season.\n\nAsher Miller  \nLike it's Mother's Day, gotta wear pink.\n\nJason Bradford  \nExactly. Cancer or military appreciation. \n\nAsher Miller  \nAll the things that nobody really should give a shit about. \n\nJason Bradford  \nIt's just driving me crazy.\n\nRob Dietz  \nIf you're gonna buy a souvenir shirt, you gotta get the one with the athlete's name on the back. You know, you gotta get a new one the next year with new athletes.\n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah, because they keep getting rid of the athletes. Well, and that's something else about fashion, which is that it's become so connected with individuals and celebrities, right? I mean, I don't know if it started with Michael Jordan and Nike, you know, but that didn't used to necessarily be the case. I mean, fashion was set, you know, in different ways. And that's why, you know, we think of things being fashionable. It goes through these cycles, or these periods, or whatever. And it's influenced by people, usually the wealthy, right? Or whatever. But we've attached it so much to like individual personas. And for celebrities, athletes, a lot of the money that they make actually comes from documents, you know, endorsements, or having their own product line that they have.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, the smart ones do that. The Jordans and the LeBrons, they run their own consumerism shops. \n\nAsher Miller  \nExactly, they start their own business. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, I think the sports jerseys is a good example of how people out here can get drawn into it, you know. It's like, \"Oh I gotta get the new jersey.\" And I'm even guilty like, I bought my daughter the special Rose City jersey version of the Portland Timbers because there was a cool new one, so . . .\n\nAsher Miller  \nIt's okay to buy something every once in a while, Rob. \n\nRob Dietz  \nWell I did incinerate it immediately because that's what our culture says to do.\n\nAsher Miller  \nYou had her wear it once, right? Yeah, here we are talking about stuff, the stuff that we've collected, of just consumerism run wild. And you played some clips for us earlier, Rob. When I think about stuff the first thing that comes to mind is the George Carlin bit, \"A place for my stuff.\" \n\nRob Dietz  \nAbsolute classic. \n\nAsher Miller  \nDo you guys -- Yeah, I mean, the whole thing is worth watching but I'm just gonna play a little bit that he did from one of his shows. \n\nGeorge Carlin  \nYou know how important that is. That's the whole meaning of life, isn't it? Trying to find a place for your stuff. That's all your house is. Your house is just a place for your stuff. If you didn't have so much goddamn stuff, you wouldn't need a house. You could just walk around all the time. That's all your house is, a pile of stuff with a cover on it. You see that when you take off in an airplane, and you look down and you see everybody's got a little pile of stuff. Everybody's got their own pile of stuff. And when you leave your stuff, you got to lock it up. Wouldn't want somebody to come by and take some of your stuff. They always take the good stuff. They don't bother with that crap you're saving. Ain't nobody interested in your fourth grade arithmetic papers. They're looking for the good stuff. That's all your house is. It's a place to keep your stuff while you go out and get more stuff. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's pretty good. Yeah, that kind of sums it up right there.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, I mean, to me, it's hilarious. He's almost just stating facts -- but it's so funny, right? My favorite part of the thing is, \"Have you noticed that their stuff is shit, and your shit is stuff?\" I love that part. \n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah, you go to these like yard sales, and you're like, \"Oh my God. I can't believe the crap these people have.\" But then of course, you probably have half the same stuff, right? \n\nRob Dietz  \nBut then you buy it and bring it home. \n\nAsher Miller  \nBut yours is not crap. \n\nRob Dietz  \nNow I have the crap. Well, you know, there is some awesome stuff out there that you do need to sock away in your house. And here's one I found. It's called Handerpants. And it's underpants for your hands.\n\nJason Bradford  \nWhat do you mean? Isn't that called gloves?\n\nAsher Miller  \nExactly. \n\nRob Dietz  \nSo it's like a fingerless glove that looks like whitey tighties covering your hands. \n\nJason Bradford  \nNot a bad idea. \n\nRob Dietz  \nAnd the whitey tighty version you can buy for $14.50.\n\nAsher Miller  \nWhat are you supposed to do with it? \n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, that's the funny thing. It says on their ad that it's stylish for any occasion. Hundreds of uses --wonderful.\n\nJason Bradford  \nIt's like you have your hankie on your hand ready to go. \n\nAsher Miller  \nExactly. All I could think is the nasty stuff that you wipe on it. And it's white.\n\nRob Dietz  \nBut here's the thing, it's $3 more for the chic black Handerpants.\n\nJason Bradford  \nIt's a great name, Handerpants. \n\nAsher Miller  \nYou know somebody just -- The whole thing came out of coming up with that name when they're drunk one night. It's completely like a backwards way of coming up with the product.\n\nRob Dietz  \nAnd that's 90% of their customers -- They're ordering when they're drunk, \"Ah I've gotta have some Handerpants. \n\nRob Dietz  \nThis is a message to all you Crazy Townies out there. Sometimes Jason, Asher, and I wish you could be here in the room with us when we're riffing on ecomodernist nightmares, the end of capitalism, the collapse of civilization, and lines from Arnold Schwarzenegger movies. Since you can't be here. Maybe we could still be in contact in another way. If you've got a comment about the show, or you want to throw some shade at us, or you've got a question . . . \n\nAsher Miller  \nOr you have a suggestion of escape route stuff. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, maybe you've got a story of your own you want to share. Go over to Apple podcasts or iTunes and leave us a review and write your comment there. In your comment, include your idea, whatever it is, and we'll think about sharing it in an episode.\n\nJason Bradford  \nHow's this? \"I'll be back.\" Is that any good?\n\nRob Dietz  \nOh my God, that's terrible. \n\nJason Bradford  \nYou try it, you try it.\n\nRob Dietz\n\"Get to the chopp-ah!\"\n\nRob Dietz  \nOkay, another listener comment we've got this episode comes in from a fellow named James. His subject is, \"The future of rural space.\" So you know -- \n\nJason Bradford  \nWhat the hell is he talking about? \n\nRob Dietz  \nI think rural areas.\n\nJason Bradford  \nOh!\n\nAsher Miller  \nWe were both thinking about it. Growing potatoes in space.\n\nRob Dietz  \nAre there Starlink satellites in rural space? Okay, so James says, \"In case you are unaware, I'm watching the World Bank presentation, \"The Future of Rural Space\" on YouTube. Their take could not be more different from your own.\" What strikes me is that's a huge surprise that we are not perfectly aligned with the World Bank.\n\nRob Dietz  \nI can't believe they haven't been listening to us. This is ridiculous. We gotta email them.\n\nAsher Miller  \nLet me guess, the future rural space in their view is there is no future for rural space.\n\nRob Dietz  \nRight. It's develop that sucker. We need cities on that rural space.\n\nAsher Miller  \nGet rid of it. That's an abomination.\n\nJason Bradford  \nThank you for the tip. I'm gonna look it up and I'm gonna write them an angry letter.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah. Thanks, James.\n\nRob Dietz  \nSo here we are at the Marvin Harris Memorial lens of doom as it applies to consumerism. And the quick reminder, Marvin Harris was an anthropologist\/sociologist type who had a little theory called cultural materialism in which he said the infrastructure, the surroundings, play a huge role in determining the structure, or the rules and policies that binds society together, which in turn plays a huge role in shaping the superstructure, or the culture and belief systems. Okay. So let's talk a little bit about the infrastructure of consumerism. There's a lot to it. I mean, we've already talked about advertising. You can think of stuff that you see in the real world, like shopping malls and these big houses where George Carlin has to put all of his stuff. \n\nJason Bradford  \nBuilt environment, yeah.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, the mega stores or big box stores. We've talked in the past about cargo ships and the containers, the standardized containers, that can go off the ship and onto rail and truck, and that amazing infrastructure.\n\nAsher Miller  \nAll the highway systems. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's right. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, I listened to an episode of a podcast that's put out by the Atlantic recently, and they were looking at barcodes. You know, the UPC symbols on every product. And that was a huge thing for standardizing the checkout line, but also inventories and making all that stuff more efficient.\n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah. Have you guys been to a store recently where like the barcode didn't work and they had to punch in like the 16-digit number. \n\nJason Bradford  \nIt takes forever. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYou know, think of the sorry employee that used to have to put a price sticker on every single product. Yeah, I mean there's other stuff too, like Amazon and related businesses, the delivery trucks and delivery services, the computer networks that are behind all of this, like PayPal and software services. I mean, huge. It's like the infrastructure of life.\n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd you're just scratching the surface I'm sure.\n\nAsher Miller  \nAnd well, there's the thing about all the supply chains of these things, right? So when we talk about fashion, for example, you know, there's the global international commodity market for things like cotton, which is a whole shitshow.\n\nJason Bradford  \nI've been to cotton fields in Arizona. It's just incredible.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, and I've seen the movie \"Trading Places\" where they are trading orange juice futures on the commodity exchange. So that's my education.\n\nAsher Miller  \nThat was high stakes trading.\n\nJason Bradford  \nI think the other thing that's important about fashion is that, you know, since we waste so much of it, it doesn't build up in our homes. It goes away. It goes somewhere. And my favorite example of that was when I would travel, there will be the stores called USA stores in different countries. And you walk in and it's like, reams and reams of compressed blocks of t-shirts from the United States.\n\nRob Dietz  \nThey were almost generating a fusion reaction. \n\nJason Bradford  \nYes, it was so dense.  And every once while you'll see like some documentary where they're in some country like Guinea Bissau in Africa, or whatever. And someone's wearing like the Super Bowl loser winner shirt. You know what I mean?\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, like, so they printed up all these t-shirts --\n\nAsher Miller  \nThe team that didn't win. \n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah, right.\n\nRob Dietz  \nSo in some part of the world you're saying, in Guinea Bissau, my Atlanta Falcons actually held on to their lead against the New England Patriots and won that game.\n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd there's a whole village celebrating that. \n\nRob Dietz  \nThey're just wearing that t-shirt.\n\nAsher Miller  \nThey're just walking around thinking the Atlanta Falcons are the best team. Of course, we know the truth.\n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd I don't actually know if that's a real example, but stuff like that is what I'm getting at, yes.\n\nJason Bradford  \nI just watch the unboxing videos, and I get dopamine.\n\nAsher Miller  \nSure. I remember traveling in Eastern Europe after the fall of the Soviet Union and American jeans were like so hot. You know, like getting Levi's was incredible. Yeah, well, so we're talking about infrastructure. Here's a weird one for you. What about dopamine? Like I was thinking about dopamine as being something that's really part of all this because a lot of this consumerist culture or the habits of consumerism, you know, buying stuff, is really fed by the dopamine rush that people get when they go buy something at a store, or they get a package delivered to their home when they're opening it up. You know, you talk about those unboxing videos.\n\nJason Bradford  \nExactly. That's recycled dopamine is what that is.\n\nRob Dietz  \nThis is not one of our escape routes. Go watch unboxing movies to short circuit your dopamine system.\n\nAsher Miller  \nBut like, where does dopamine fit? Is it infrastructure? It's not like structure. It's not part of like the rules of society. It's not superstructure. So it's gotta be infrastructure.\n\nRob Dietz  \nI think it is infrastructure. Even though it's inside our bodies.\n\nAsher Miller  \nWeird. I don't know. I think it plays a big role in all this. \n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah, it does. \n\nRob Dietz  \nIt's pretty wild. Yeah, I like thinking of that -- of the way we're built is infrastructure.\n\nAsher Miller  \nPhysical, yeah. Or internal infrastructure. \n\nRob Dietz  \nAlright well let's turn to structure now, which again, these are the rules of consumerism. And, you know, we could get really exhaustive here, but there's just some things that rose to the surface for me when I was thinking about this. One is the way that in our culture, working a high paying job it's like a rule. You've got to do that if you want to be able to afford what you need. I mean, even medical care in the United States. If you want to afford that, you better have a job that's giving you insurance and paying you because your insurance isn't going to cover it. You know, there's other rules too. Like hey, have 27 credit cards and buy everything on credit. And don't worry about carrying a debt if you don't have the money. Just do it.\n\nAsher Miller  \nI mean, we've talked about this before. Credit was a huge -- \n\nJason Bradford  \nInvention. \n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah. You know, creating credit and credit cards, and the mechanisms of all that, totally unlocked the consumer culture. I mean, without that I think it would've been really difficult.\n\nJason Bradford  \nGo back to Season Four, people. A lot of stuff we're touching on is Season Four material here. \n\nRob Dietz  \nAnother one that really came up for me, in terms of the kind of policies and rules of consumerism, is that marketing has become  it's a major field of study that you apply to every single business, you know? Every business that's out there has teams of marketers to push their stuff.\n\nAsher Miller  \nThe team we have at Post Carbon Institute, incredible. \n\nRob Dietz  \nWell I mean, we do have communication staff. That is incredible because we have to get our message out there. But you know, they're not trying to sell you a bunch of plastic crap.\n\nJason Bradford  \nIt'd be easier if we were. \n\nAsher Miller  \nIt'd be a lot easier. \n\nJason Bradford  \nWhat we're trying to sell is the hardest stuff.\n\nAsher Miller  \nDepression.\n\nRob Dietz  \nAnd I even looked at, I was sort of like, well, what about marketing in the universities? And, you know, the U.S. News and World Report, they do a lot of stuff with ranking colleges, but they also talk about the different majors. And they had this to say about marketing: They said, \"A marketing major studies the branding and promotion of products and services to the public, and how to target specific demographics.\"\n\nJason Bradford  \nI'd be so proud of my kids if they went into marketing.\n\nRob Dietz  \nIt's a field of study. \n\nJason Bradford  \nI know. I can't believe it.\n\nAsher Miller  \nBut it actually makes a big difference. Good marketing, like you think about Nike and the \"Just Do It\" ad. It was incredible. I could go on a rant about universities and marketing, because you're talking about degrees in marketing and how they're describing that. Let me just tell you how much fucking mail my family has received in the last I don't know how many months from every university in the entire country practically. Some of them, 8 to 12 times. I'm not even joking. Like, constantly just sending us postcards, sending us packets, sending us magazines, emails, basically trying to get my son to apply to their college so that they could decline him basically.\n\nJason Bradford  \nI still remember one of those when I was in high school. I got one, it was you know, a pretty glossy thing. It says, \"How does Puget Sound?\" \n\nAsher Miller  \nOh, that's clever.\n\nJason Bradford  \nIsn't that good?\n\nRob Dietz  \nThat's good marketing. Excellent marketing. I want to go on a little rant about marketing as a verb. To market something -- it's like you with your birding.\n\nAsher Miller  \nIn Europe, they talked about marketing as a different -- it means a different thing. It means to actually go to market. Here it doesn't.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, here --- Yeah, you gotta market the shit out of Puget Sound University. \n\nAsher Miller  \nThere's another thing that enables this consumerism and it really applies to some of the stuff that we're talking about with fashion, right? Which is sort of return policies and the changes that have happened I think with how easy it is to return things. So we've seen a real shift with the internet age in e-commerce where I think a lot of what e-commerce was trying to do was to undercut and compete against retail stores. So they're offering you know, a lot of it was around like free shipping in some cases, but they're also making it really easy to return stuff, you know? And changing those to make it so easy. And there's actually an infrastructure around that too. Like the infrastructure around that is you can buy something from Amazon, you know, on your computer, it gets delivered to you amazingly in your house, you get your dopamine rush and you're like, \"Fuck this. I don't like it.\" And then you just basically can drop it off at the UPS store or wherever you go, and you don't have to do anything. You literally just drop it. \"Here's the box,\" and they take care of all of it for you. And with kind of free return policies or exchanges, or whatever, you just get the next thing.\n\nRob Dietz  \nDo you get any dopamine from that drop off procedure?\n\nAsher Miller  \nI don't know if it's the same level of dopamine.\n\nJason Bradford  \nBut people are buying extra sizes because they're not sure. And then they send the sizes that don't fit back.\n\nAsher Miller  \nBecause we used to go to the store and try on different sizes. I mean, we've had that in my house. My son, who's grown so much, it's like, what's the right shoe size for him? \n\nJason Bradford  \nRight, yeah. Sure. I think a lot of that gets trashed, doesn't it? \n\nAsher Miller  \nYes. We've talked about this. Yeah, most of it goes to the garbage, you know.\n\nRob Dietz  \nPretty soon we can get rid of the trucks and we can have those old bank vacuum tubes just running to everybody's house. So Amazon just puts stuff in a vacuum tube that comes to your house, and you just shovel stuff back in there.\n\nAsher Miller  \nWell Amazon has been working on drone deliveries, right? And in some places guaranteeing that you can get stuff within two hours.\n\nJason Bradford  \nIt's hard because I don't tend to follow these rules. So like, I wear the same clothes over and over again. I'll often have the same pair of pants, the same sweatshirt day in and day out. I do change underwear and socks and t-shirts.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, you've got a brand new pair of Handerpants. \n\nJason Bradford  \nYes, exactly. But other than that, it's like I cycle through the same thing. But you know, there's this whole stigma against wearing the same, like fancy clothes out to events, when people would go out to like events. And you have to get a different dress or whatever.\n\nAsher Miller  \nIt's more for women than men to be honest. I mean, I can wear the same tux.\n\nJason Bradford  \nI can wear the same suit over and over and no one's gonna care.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, I think that's getting into the idea of superstructure and the culture around this. So let's maybe segue there. And I gotta say that it is pervasive in American culture to think if I can just own that one thing, that thing over there, I'm gonna be happy. Like I feel like that's programmed and an underlying current in the whole setup. And I want to be immune to it, but sometimes I find I'm not. You know, I can get pretty obsessive about -- Especially cycling stuff, you know? Like gotta have a really nice bike. Yeah. Geez I think the other thing, and I don't fall prey to this one that much, but it's sorta like your stuff defines who you are. Rather than your values, rather than what you're bringing to the world, it's the load of crap that you have on you, and with you, and what you're wearing.\n\nAsher Miller  \nI think we're all susceptible to that stuff. Like, we have attachments to brands. I remember learning about how, I think  Ford was the first company that started offering different paint colors for for their cars, you know?\n\nRob Dietz  \nI don't know. I thought Ford was: you can have it any color you want as long as it's black. \n\nAsher Miller  \nRight. Well I don't remember which company it was, but that was an innovation that they had. And that was part of it was being able to sort of say, like, this represents my identity. Do you know what I mean? I know some people are like, \"I only get a car this color.\" It's not even like the brand. Do you know what I mean? But attaching your identity to an object or a consumer product, I think we're all susceptible to it. My favorite time of year is Christmas.\n\nRob Dietz  \nIt's the most wonderful time of the year. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's a pretty good song. \n\nAsher Miller  \nAnd Black Friday. And I'm so glad that they decided to roll out Cyber Monday. They're gonna have, you know, I don't know what . . . Throw up Thursday.\n\nRob Dietz  \nBuy more crap Friday. You need a self storage unit Sunday.\n\nJason Bradford  \nI mean, the taco industry has got their own day. \n\nAsher Miller  \nRight, Taco Tuesday.\n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's huge. That's one's fine.\n\nAsher Miller  \nWe need more days of the week just so that we can, you know, offer them up to different brands. \n\nJason Bradford  \nYou can have sandwich Saturday.\n\nRob Dietz  \nOh, look at you. You're like a marketer.\n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah, but that whole thing. I mean, here ask the Jew -- How did that happen? How did this Christmas thing happen where suddenly you have to buy a whole bunch of shit to show people that one, apparently you love Jesus Christ, and you love your family.\n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah. I mean it was more -- I'm sure we could do a whole episode on how Christmas was commercialized blah blah blah. \n\nAsher Miller  \nBut it's like this -- \n\nJason Bradford  \nOh yeah. It's completely embedded. And in so many stores now you get guilted into buying something because like, you know the local stores really rely on the Christmas season to stay in business. So if you don't want your whole downtown shuttered, shop locally so you can, you know. I have a big problem. I have drawers that I open and I go, \"Oh yeah. This is the kitch that was in my stocking for the last 20 years.\" Like the stuff doesn't go away.\n\nJason Bradford  \nAll your little Beavis and Butthead dolls.\n\nJason Bradford  \nLittle like keychain knives, or whatever, that you can't actually use because if he ever goes someplace that has a metal detector you lose your car keys. And I don't know. It's just crazy stuff where what are you going to do with all this stuff? So this is the problem -- \n\nAsher Miller  \nStorage. We've already solved this problem. A storage unit. \n\nJason Bradford  \nHere's what I'm thinking: even if you are good and do your best--\n\nAsher Miller  \nYou get gifts from people. \n\nJason Bradford  \nYou get gifts from people. Yeah, it's like how many pairs of pajamas do you need? I don't know. Or robes? So anyway . . . \n\nAsher Miller  \nI can't get enough. \n\nRob Dietz  \nThat's why, again, you need your home incinerator from Amazon.\n\nGeorge  Costanza  \nEvery decision I've ever made in my entire life has been wrong. My life is the complete opposite of everything I want it to be. \n\nJerry Seinfeld\nIf every instinct you have is wrong, then the opposite would have to be right.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWe started today with my therapy session on having worked at Toys  R  Us. One escape route that happened to me is I got a job in landscaping.\n\nJason Bradford  \nMowing lawns and using leaf blowers. Sounds wonderful. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah well let's add to that. It was 100 degrees often in the Southern United States. \n\nJason Bradford  \n85% humidity. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah. I mean, pretty rough stuff. It was way, and I mean way more fulfilling.\n\nAsher Miller  \nWere you like listening to Toys  R  Us jingles while you were doing this work? \n\nRob Dietz  \nOf course. Of course I was. But no, I mean, I can't say the work was unbelievably meaningful, but it was much more meaningful. And it was at least outside. I wasn't surrounded by you know, technicolor plastic shit all day long. \n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd those Atlanta glass office parks look wonderful because of you. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYes, yes. It was really, really quite nice. So I mean, you know, to me that's a first do the opposite -- is just avoid if you can.\n\nJason Bradford  \nRetail? Yeah. Well, I complained about you know, getting gifts and stuff. My wife actually has a nice set of rules for this. Like, there's an exception -- \n\nRob Dietz  \nOh, so she has a structure. \n\nJason Bradford  \nShe does. She does. And her structure is if your gift is giving an experience. Right? So like, she's trying to get me to do these wingsuit sort of courses.\n\nAsher Miller  \nWhat? \n\nRob Dietz  \nShe's trying to kill you. \n\nAsher Miller  \nShe wants to kill you.\n\nJason Bradford  \nWell, there's good insurance right now. It's gonna expire soon.\n\nAsher Miller  \nShe's gotta get you out there.\n\nRob Dietz  \nAlso because you're anti-consumerist, you're getting like a third hand wingsuit.\n\nAsher Miller  \nA reused one. You don't know where it came from. \n\nJason Bradford  \nGoodwill. \n\nAsher Miller  \nYou don't know what happened to the guy. \n\nRob Dietz  \nThis one is still good. The left wing's got some holes in it. You can duct tape those.\n\nAsher Miller  \nThose are not blood marks on there.\n\nJason Bradford  \nRight. The other rule is like it's got to be edible, drinkable, or burnable. Like candles or a cord of wood. I don't know. \n\nRob Dietz  \nI was gonna say everything's burnable, right. You just need some gasoline. \n\nAsher Miller  \nA cord of wood as a gift.  \n\nRob Dietz  \nHere's a few more infrastructure changes that I would want to see. I mean, one would be complete boycott of the storage industry. Maybe except when you're moving, or something like that. Another would be getting rid of or downplaying, to the extent you can, advertising. And I got this pretty cool ad blocker software. You know, we have to use computers for this godforsaken work that we're doing here. And I noticed the ad blocker works really well, like Asher, you're always sending depressing articles that I need to read. \n\nAsher Miller  \nAnd it blocks the entire article? \n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, it will. It'll say like, \"Oh, sorry. You have to turn off your ad blocker to access this news website.\" Because that's how they're making their money. And it just saves me time because I don't read your article.\n\nAsher Miller  \nTime and psyche, right? A friend of ours, Steve Lambert who is an artist, years and years ago he developed this Firefox add on, which was basically an ad blocker, but what it did was replace ads with beautiful art. \n\nJason Bradford  \nOh, that's nice. \n\nAsher Miller  \nWhich is really sweet. Lovely.\n\nRob Dietz  \nThat's pretty cool. Yeah. I like what you were saying, Jason, about the Costa Rica small hut or whatever. Like, I like to think of infrastructure that a backpacker or a bike tourist has. \n\nAsher Miller  \nOr Jack Reacher. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah. Well, I mean, it really is like down to the essentials and the simplification that comes with it. I mean, I think that's why so many people like backpacking.\n\nAsher Miller  \nI have a confession. So talking about essentials, you know, I was backpacking, I was in Europe for seven months when I was in college in the early 90s. And at the time, I was listening to the Grateful Dead on cassette tapes. And I was going to be gone for seven months. \n\nJason Bradford  \nWow, how many cassettes tapes did you bring? \n\nAsher Miller  \nSo I brought 60 cassette tapes. And that's that.\n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's for one concert.\n\nAsher Miller  \nThat sat like a brick at the bottom of my huge backpack. That was at least 10 pounds. And I had to take that with me. So you know, your essentials and my essentials, Rob, might be a little different. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah. Well, I mean, it makes sense to me. I mean, you're gonna not have underwear, but you're gonna have Grateful Dead tapes. \n\nAsher Miller  \nExactly.\n\nJason Bradford  \nWell you know, I think we should call back to Vicki Robbins because she talks about the meaningfulness of time. And this also relates to the meaningfulness of stuff. If you think about, if you're spending your time working, right, and you're making money, you have to work more to get all this stuff. To maintain all this stuff. And so, if you can focus on the meaningfulness of stuff and pare it down, then your finances really become less of a critical thing. That can be secondary in your life rather than the primary thing you need, so that you can have this stuff.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, it's huge. I feel like that's how I, I won't say got ahead, but caught up, after I left college. I was in debt and I just didn't buy anything for three years. And I remember that as a really happy time. Paid off all my student loans. And it gave me the freedom to change careers because I didn't like what I was doing.\n\nAsher Miller  \nThere's two things about that that to me feel really important. One is, you're talking about, in order to get this stuff, the need to get a job and the pressure that that creates. It's also the reverse in a sense, which is I think that a lot of people resort to consumption of things, you know. Whether it's products, or it can be actually entertainment as a form of consumption, because they feel an emptiness in their lives, right? So if you're spending all your time working, or doing things that are unfulfilling to you, that don't feel that meaningful to you, you're actually more inclined to seek that from something else. So if you're lucky enough to be able to dedicate your time to something that gives you joy, and meaning, and purpose, maybe there's less of a desire to consume things in order to kinda fulfill yourself.\n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd you'll be paid so much less anyway that you won't have the possibility. \n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah. It's a beautiful virtuous circle. You're gonna get paid shit so you can't afford any of that stuff. But there's the other piece about that, that was the second thing, which is that you can appreciate things a lot more when you don't have as much of them. You know, like, if you're needing to save up for something, or you decide that you're going to save up to get something that maybe is more expensive, but higher quality and is gonna last longer. It means a lot more to you, I think, then something that you could buy quickly. And I think that's part of why, you know. The shit we get is so crappy, no wonder we just returned 60% of it, you know, or whatever.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, one of the problems with trying to change the structure that surrounds us is a lot of it's embedded in the laws or in institutions, and we don't have direct access. So one of the things I often do is I make my own rule, and pretend like it is one of those embedded rules. So the example is credit cards. I've never carried a debt on a credit card my whole life.\n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah, I haven't either. I mean, accidentally, maybe. I forgot to pay it off.\n\nRob Dietz  \nTreat it like it's a debit card. You never buy stuff on a credit card unless you can stick it to the bank by just using the service but never paying them interest. To me, that's a way to have your own policies. I want to turn to the cultural like, how can we have a different culture around consumerism, and this can be relatively quick because we covered this back in episode 33. when I got to interview Sandra Goldmark. Do you guys remember? She had that book \"Fixation: How to Have Stuff without Breaking the Planet.\" And so that was during our Hidden Drivers season. And it was an episode about relative status and status seeking behaviors, or the Keeping Up with the Joneses or the Kardashians. And she had these rules for stuff that I thought were pretty awesome.\n\nJason Bradford  \nWe probably made that Kardashian joke in that episode.\n\nRob Dietz  \nOh I'm sure. Too easy. So she adapted these rules from Michael Pollan's - \n\nJason Bradford  \nPollan?\n\nRob Dietz  \nPollan\/Pollen. Yeah. \n\nJason Bradford  \nI don't know.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYou say Tomolan I say Tamalen. So his rules for food were, \"Eat food, not too much, mostly plants.\" Very succinct. Very nice. What Sandra said about stuff, she said, \"Have good stuff, not too much, mostly reclaimed.\" And then she added a coda which said, \"Care for it and pass it on.\" And I think that s pretty succinct, pretty awesome as well. So if we could get that more widely dispersed in the culture, we d be seeing some change.\n\nJason Bradford  \nAnd you know, I think that we've been down on the media a bit in this episode, about how it propagates these sort of consumerist ideals. But there's also subversive elements in the media, you know, sometimes a popular movie. But I want to turn to music. Can you guys think of some music\/songs that is anti-consumer? \n\nRob Dietz  \nOh totally. Totally. I had a Sheryl Crow-aissance recently.\n\nAsher Miller  \nCrow-aissance? \n\nJason Bradford  \nShe's outstanding. Outstanding.\n\nRob Dietz  \nI actually saw her in concert once. It was really good. Anyway, she has that song, \"Soak up the Sun,\" right? My favorite lyric is -\n\nJason Bradford  \n\"I wanna soak up the sun.\"\n\nRob Dietz  \nMy favorite lyric is the, \"It's not having what you want. It's wanting what you've got.\"\n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's nice. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah. \n\nJason Bradford  \nOkay, can you guys figure out which song I'm singing? Ready? \"What's the matter with the clothes I'm wearing? Can't you tell that your tie's too wide?\"\n\nRob Dietz  \nThat's that Billy Joel song.\n\nJason Bradford  \n\"Maybe I should buy some old tab collars. Welcome back to the age of jive.\"\n\nRob Dietz  \nHow long do we let him go? Stop, stop. \n\nJason Bradford  \nIt's a good one. \n\nAsher Miller  \n\"It's Still Rock And Roll To Me\"\n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah! \"Everybody's talkin' 'bout the new sound, funny. But it's still rock and roll to me.\" It's a great song. I love Billy Joel. Now, here's the deal. That song was a consequence of Billy Joel getting pressure from the music industry - \n\nRob Dietz  \nDidn't he record a song called \"Pressure,\" too? \n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah. But they were pressuring him -- this is 1980 -- to like, get into the new wave. Get into, you know, something a little more - \n\nRob Dietz  \nSynthesizing? \n\nJason Bradford  \nSynthesizing and stuff like that. And he's just like you know, no. Like, this fashiony, you know, gimmicky, fatty stuff, not about that.\n\nRob Dietz  \nLet me share one more song because we gotta have something that's from modern history here. Can't all be Grateful Dead and Billy Joel. Even Sheryl Crow. So there was this song that came out, I think in 2022, by a performer named Jax called, \"Victoria's Secret.\" In the lyrics in there, she says --\n\nJason Bradford  \nSings. Why don't you sing? \n\nRob Dietz  \nI don't know the tune very well. And I'm not going to perform live like you just did. She says, \"I know Victoria's Secret. Girl, you wouldn't believe. She's an old man who lives in Ohio making money off of girls like me. Cashing in on body issues selling skin and bones with big boobs. I know Victoria's Secret. She was made up by a dude.\"\n\nAsher Miller  \nThat's good. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's pretty good. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah. I think that's a really good song. And it's kind of about, yeah, don't fall prey to the deception. Who gives a shit about the Joneses?\n\nAsher Miller  \nWell and that's the thing is that when you peel back the curtain on it a little bit, you just see that it's all manipulation. Right? And you've got you know, these companies that are basically selling products to fill an emptiness that's in our in our hearts and basically co-opting people that we look up to who maybe were creative and wonderful at one point, or whatever, and then became sellouts. \n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, wait til you hear who we have as a sponsor today. Wait til the end to hear that one.\n\nJason Bradford  \nOkay, so is anybody doing this? Like, we're saying here we should maybe do this kind of stuff. Where can we turn to for inspiration? There is this Swedish concept called lagom, which sort of means just the right amount, you know? Enoughness. Right? Is that a word, enoughness?\n\nRob Dietz  \nSure. And let me just say  --\n\nAsher Miller  \nYou're asking the right guy, \"Enough is Enough.\"\n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah. That's a great book. Great book. Buy it. Give it for Christmas.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah. I should put out a Swedish version, \"Lagom is Lagom.\" Yeah, but can I just say I'm proud of you, Asher, for attempting a Swedish accent without doing it muppet-style Swedish Chef. It's less offensive. Way to go. \n\nAsher Miller  \nIt's probably still offensive to our Swedish listeners.\n\nJason Bradford  \nYeah. And sort of there's this social cohesion that happens when like, you don't take too much, you're happy and just have enough. So there's always then a fair share. It's also about thinking about others, not just about yourself.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWell and does it tie to what you were just talking about, Asher? The idea of, there's an emptiness? \n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah. \n\nRob Dietz  \nAnd so, instead of shopping or you know, having an instant dopamine hit that goes away also instantly, if you can think about how much is enough and be satisfied with that, you're just so much more secure and so much less susceptible to that emptiness?\n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah. Yeah, I think that's true.\n\nJason Bradford  \nWere there any Abba songs about that?\n\nRob Dietz  \nI don't know. My God. There's got to be a modern popular Swedish artist. We don't have to go back to Abba.\n\nJason Bradford  \nThey had a great Abba tribute band at the Benton County Fair. Anyway.\n\nAsher Miller  \nYou know, there's crossover actually, when you think about sort of indigenous views on enoughness, right. I'm going to quote an article that was back from 2009. But pretty much says the same kind of idea of what you're talking about. I'm quoting here, \"An indigenous system is based on prosperity, creation, kinship, and a sense of enoughness. It is designed for sharing, potlatches, giveaways. These involve deliberately accumulating wealth as a person, or as a family or as a clan, for the sole purpose of giving it away. That puts in motion a continual ongoing requirement for redistribution.\" So it's kinda like flipping it on its head a little bit, and it just reminds me -- I want to give a plug for another podcast that we produce that's called \"Holding the Fire,\" which is interviews with indigenous leaders from around the world, where they talk a lot about their cultures that they come from. And maybe something for us to learn from and take in for sure.\n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah, I like that idea a lot. And even just kind of putting it into practice a little bit where I live is the whole idea of sharing with your neighbors and being able to give away like, when I have something that I don't need, or I have extra produce that I've grown or whatever, like that kind of stuff happens a lot. And  I think our culture unfortunately has sort of like shied away from that in a sense. But I've gone the other direction. Like I am completely okay with asking anybody in my neighborhood for anything of theirs. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's great. Yeah, cup of sugar. \n\nRob Dietz  \nMaybe they think I'm, you know, there's something's wrong with me or . . . No, seriously, I'm like, \"Do you have us a miter saw that I could use? Can I use your lawnmower? I don't want to buy all this crap, and I don't need it for much. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's good.\n\nAsher Miller  \nThat's the thing is we were talking about dopamine earlier. The dopamine you get from buying something or unpacking something -- I would say the dopamine of giving something, of lending something, it's got to be at least as high. \n\nJason Bradford  \nIt's a true dopamine hit. \n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah, this is going to be like such a trope, but another thing to keep in mind is just the three R's, right, reduce, reuse, recycle as a hierarchy. I know we've heard it ad nauseam. But, you know, it's there for a reason. And I think it's a pretty sound -- you talked about rules earlier -- I think it's a pretty sound one as well. And, you know, then buy stuff to last. I mean, I talked about that a little bit earlier. You know, buying things are made out of quality, buying things that you can actually repair. There are efforts underway now to push back against the fact that most of the things you buy now you cannot repair, right? Disassemble them, or whatever. And there is starting to be a push back against that. Learn how to sew yourself, you know, you gotta . . . I know that you were looking for a pair of crotchless panties for yourself, Jason. Just sew your own. . \n\nRob Dietz  \nWhy? Why? \n\nAsher Miller  \nI can ask why. \n\nRob Dietz  \nNo, not why is he . . . Why do you have to bring this up?\n\nAsher Miller  \nJust a great example. \n\nRob Dietz  \nIt's imagery no one needs? \n\nAsher Miller  \nReal world example. \n\nJason Bradford  \nNo one needs. \n\nRob Dietz  \nWell look, at the societal scale, besides, you know, sort of in your own household, I think there are things that we can support as well. In looking for some ideas for this episode, I came across a book by Wendy Woloson. She's a professor historian. And she wrote a book called, \"Crap: A History of Cheap Stuff in America.\" \n\nJason Bradford  \nNice. \n\nRob Dietz  \nYeah. And she had this, I listened to her on a podcast, and she had this pretty cool summary of how things used to work with clothing. And she said, historically, clothing would be refashioned over time. So I have an outfit, and it would get worn. So the first thing you do is you would re-dye it, get the color back up to snuff, and you would re-sew it if there's any anything that needs that. And then over time, that would get kind of worn out. And so then what they would do is they would take it apart. You would take the stitching out, and you would re-sew an article of clothing for a smaller person. And then when that got worn out, there were people who were rag dealers who would come around and you would sell this used piece of clothing to a rag dealer who would then get it converted into paper or another usable thing. Now, we might not be able to get back to that.\n\nJason Bradford  \nNo, but I think you know, there is that Patagonia kind of movement, right? Where they're actually selling their own clothes that have been worn before. The Worn Wear Program. And they do some repair and they do a lot of recycling. If it really is worn out they'll try to recycle it into something new. So that's -- upcycling as the other term for that.\n\nAsher Miller  \nYeah. I mean, Patagonia has been known for a long time as being sort of the vanguard of efforts to rethink what a corporation does, right? You think about a company that's selling apparel products, changing the entire business model.  There needs to be more of them. Interface, the carpet company, that's another one that people have talked about. We need a lot more of them obviously to do that. But it's great to have those those examples from the corporate world. I think it's worth talking about what people are doing on a policy level as well. And gotta go to the most brilliant country on Earth, the French. \n\nJason Bradford  \nReally? \n\nRob Dietz  \nCertainly can't stay in America for good policies on consumerism.\n\nAsher Miller  \nSo, a couple of things. In 2016, they passed a law in France that forced supermarkets to donate expired food. We had a whole conversation about waste food, right? As long as there wasn't a safety risk with that food. And three years later it appeared to be working. Donations to food banks were up 20%. In 2020, they passed an anti-waste law for a circular economy. \n\nJason Bradford  \nWow. \n\nAsher Miller  \nAnd you know, I think it's early days yet but some of the key things that were put into that law was no destroying unsold or returned items. We talked about that with the fashion industry, right? All plastic needs to be recyclable by 2025. \n\nJason Bradford  \nThat's coming up.\n\nAsher Miller  \n50% reduction in single use plastic bottles, phasing out of paper receipts, fast food takeout restaurants have to stop using plastic containers, I guess, by last year. I wonder how they did. Informing consumers about repairability of their products, what we talked about earlier. Helping them make decisions about longevity, environmental impacts of their products. So really trying to push on incentives and regulatory structures, you know, to shift that.\n\nRob Dietz  \nWell, if there's one thing that Americans like it's the French. \n\nAsher Miller  \nYes, to learn from the French. \n\nRob Dietz  \nFollowing the French example.\n\nMelody Allison  \nThat's our show. Thanks for listening. If you liked what you heard, and you want others to consider these issues, then please share Crazy Town with your friends, hit that share button in your podcast app, or just tell them face to face. Maybe you can start some much needed conversations and do some things together to get us out of Crazy Town. Thanks again for listening and sharing.\n<\/pre><\/div><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>If American consumers ever come up for air under the pile of crap in their storage units, they find themselves face to face with a materialistic hellscape of megastores, McMansions, endless fleets of delivery trucks, and evil hordes of targeted ads. But help is on the way. Jason, Rob, and Asher present ideas for shaping up a world beyond consumerism.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":128238,"featured_media":3500360,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[251744,79718,251746,79720],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-3500347","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-crazy-town","category-environment","category-podcasts","category-society"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3500347","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/128238"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3500347"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3500347\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/3500360"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3500347"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3500347"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.resilience.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3500347"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}