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EE_
14th March 2015, 05:49 AM
LIFE PLAN03.12.15
Only The Rich Can Turn Their Phones Off: The Harsh Lesson of Patrick Pichette

Google CFO Patrick Pichette’s retirement note made many cheer, with its stirring declaration to focus on personal happiness after years of toil. Most of us will never be able to afford to do the same.
All of the people who created the always-on culture are abandoning it.

The latest, on Tuesday night, was Google CFO Patrick Pichette, who wrote a stunner of an exit note to the world. And it was not a note to Google, whom he says he loved and which left him feeling fulfilled and, for the most part, whole. It was, in fact, to the world.

He lays out a beautiful image: At the very tip-top of Mt. Kilimanjaro, he turns to his wife, and she looks back, 25 years into the marriage, and asks, “Why don’t we keep going?” And by keep going, she means not up the mountain, and not with this marriage despite the iPhone going off all the time, but out to the Serengeti and the corners and the middle of Africa and beyond. It is a gorgeous image, and then he tempers it:

But I have emails, he says.

And then, on crowd-pleasing terms, he quits his job forever.

Pichette’s leaving his job as a CFO to see the world now, and good on him. He’s leaving his cellphone decidedly somewhere else.

But he is, in fact, leaving behind an American working culture that he helped create—one that is on the clock as long as it’s near a cellphone (or, always)—and he’s not alone.

Katharine Zaleski, who’s the president of her company PowerToFly, recently came to the same realization: She had enabled (and maybe even created) an impossible work environment to anyone with a soul. While on maternity leave, she realized how unfair she had been to working mothers in her own workplaces.

The truth is, escape of the kind Pichette has alighted upon is now an option available only to an increasingly rare few. Like when you’re a CFO at Google, or the president of your own company.

Not all thrive in the chaos of an on-call culture. Many, or most, simply work harder and more than ever for just enough to catch up to the rising cost of basic goods, or the astronomical cost of home ownership, or the inflated cost of a college education.

Many, or most, cannot afford vacations like Pichette’s to assuage and suspend the rigors of nonstop work.

Many, or most, toil.

“The value becomes doing the work itself, not the thing you’ve created. If you don't work really hard—if you don’t have the hours to show for it—you're a bad person.”
The worst part? The problem is not the embarrassing internal imbroglio we think it is or make it out to be—that when we consider our time on this Earth, we weigh the value of our own importance to the world as a worker against how that might be better spent with our family.

That is an emotional rationalization to make it appear as if most of us have that choice.

The problem is that we are too tired and poor to consider that at all. And, when we do, we often simply do not have the means to change it.

The false choice that we can turn our work off when we leave the office is part of an American dream that long ago ate itself. Productivity has risen 64.9 percent in the United States from 1979 to 2013. Wages grew just 6 percent in the same time period. Average college tuition soared from just under $11,000 in 1973 to a little over $30,000 in 2014.

To continue collecting a paycheck above minimum wage in a meek economy, workers have handed over their off-hours as a vow of fidelity to their jobs above all. They have dissolved their lives to appear more dedicated.

And for what? For the ability to one day be lucky enough to make leaving it the choice they have always pretended that it is.

Zaleski says, “Mothers could have a third option that would allow them to either remain in the workforce or be a part of it even from areas with few job options. All the tools exist for remote work—Slack, Jira, Skype, Trello, Google Docs.”

But, of course, we don’t use those tools to allow ourselves more free time. We use those tools to be available for work during every waking hour.

Americans work more than any other Western nation, and they work more weekend and overtime hours than anybody else by a longshot. It is not simply part of our identity. It is the necessity of being alive as an American in 2015. It is our whole identity by default.


Western workers are starting to figure this out. In August of last year, David Graeber wrote a story for the London alt-weekly Strike! called “On the Phenomenon of Bullshit Jobs.” This might not sound like a big deal, but every time a new wave of readers finds this piece, something unbelievable happens: Average people get very, very attached to it.

Within two weeks of its publication, he says, it was translated into 20 different languages. A few months later, on January 2, when most people were taking the Tube back to work, signs showed up in the London subway with full sentences from the article. One example: “How can one even begin to speak of dignity in labor when one secretly feels one’s job should not exist?”

Then, last month, a Youtube video of him simply talking about his article on the Russo-British TV station RT went viral. The video was unlisted. He doesn’t know how it happened.

The crux of it?

“In the year 1930, John Maynard Keynes predicted that technology would have advanced sufficiently by century’s end that countries like Great Britain or the United States would achieve a 15-hour workweek. There’s every reason to believe he was right. In technological terms, we are quite capable of this. And yet it didn’t happen. Instead, technology has been marshaled, if anything, to figure out ways to make us all work more.

“In order to achieve this, jobs have had to be created that are, effectively, pointless. Huge swathes of people, in Europe and North America in particular, spend their entire working lives performing tasks they secretly believe do not really need to be performed. The moral and spiritual damage that comes from this situation is profound. It is a scar across our collective soul. Yet virtually no one talks about it.”

“We need to change our definition of work,” says Graeber, from London. When The Daily Beast calls him, he is responding from a phone in a bathtub, so he has certainly figured something out.

“Historically, in the 19th century is when we started to hear that real value came from work—and that our value is in the stuff that we make. In the 20th century, it shifted. Now, value comes from brilliant entrepreneurs: They make the whole system and you're just a bunch of stupid machines,” says Graeber.

And that, Graeber says, is where a problem comes in: If a workforce is told that its value isn't in the actual creation of a tangible thing, then it will have to find some worth in another way.

“So then the value becomes doing the work itself, not the thing you’ve created. If you don’t work really hard—if you don’t have the hours to show for it—you’re a bad person,” he says. “Once you say that work is good and it doesn’t matter whether it produces something or not, it creates this bizarre idea where it can be even more moral if it produces nothing.”

That’s how, he says, we get a culture obsessed with its phones, determined to never miss that incorporeal something—when the something, as Patrick Pichette found out, is not necessarily ever achievable at work.

Pichette had to climb the mountain—both to the bleeding edge of progress (Google), and the literal one (Kilimanjaro)—to find that out. The rest of us, feeling the phantom vibrations of an empty connected life, are finding it out slowly, our introspection quieted by the lonely hum of our now technologically enslaved selves.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/03/12/only-the-rich-can-turn-their-phones-off-the-harsh-lesson-of-patrick-pichette.html

palani
14th March 2015, 06:02 AM
"Is technology making your life better?"

What is the definition of "is"?

Can you define "is" without using "is"?

Could this the be basis of a war on ISIS (IS-IS)?

Shami-Amourae
14th March 2015, 06:24 AM
Yes.

EE_
14th March 2015, 06:53 AM
Yes.

Is technology making society better?

Has technology allowed you to spend more time doing fun things with actual people (in person)?

Has technology allowed you to spend more time finding love, being in love and sharing your life with an actual member of the opposite sex?

Has technology made you a more caring person about others, or having more empathy toward others?

Has technology enriched your life with the enjoyment of nature, the connection of your surroundings and people?

Has technology made you feel more whole and less lonely?

Has technology made you more independent and less self-absorbed?

Has technology given the government less power over you?


Technology-Driven Narcissism Cheapens Life and Morality
Bob Barr

Years ago, what one was having for dinner was news only for those sitting around the table. But in today’s hyper-connected society, every common, banal activity is deemed sufficiently important to be captured, cataloged, and broadcast to a global network of equally insipid “friends.” There are even specialized terms like “selfie” and “hashtag” to describe a process that, until now, was nothing more noteworthy than a group photo. The self-titled gurus of this social media realm call it “creating content,” despite the obvious fact that nothing is being created.

One need only spend a few minutes on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram to see that today’s youth are more self-absorbed and feeling more self-important than ever. Rather than find role models and inspirational leaders in the likes of Steve Jobs, who changed modern digital technology with the production of the first iPhone, or Marc Andreessen, who helped launch the first web browser and now is helping push an equally revolutionary technology, Bitcoin, many “millennials” are obsessed with vapid Hollywood tabloid starlets like Kim Kardashian, or the latest YouTube “celebrity” – as if becoming a celebrity actually takes true talent anymore.

This growing obsession with other people’s lives, and with believing that other people must be interested in every daily detail of our lives, has reached the point at which there now is a hashtag to describe this feeling -- #FOMO, which stands for “fear of missing out.”

Rather than enjoy the tangible reality of our own, God-granted existence, we cling to social media in order to live vicariously through the ephemeral, digital experiences of others. In the process, we are losing our sense of decency, morality and humanity.

Some might posit that our culture of social media makes us more interconnected; but if so, it comes at the cost of sacrificing the connection with ourselves. And, to compensate for the increasing hollowness of our own existence, researchers discovered people, especially those suffering from loneliness or depression, desperately attempt to fill it by sharing even more about ourselves, thus feeding the cycle rather than breaking it. “There’s a lot of social pressure to show that everything’s great,” one observer told Market Watch. “It’s a never-ending quest to be interesting and intellectual and unique, and strive to prove something to the world. You [can no longer] just be yourself.”

There is a darker side to this obsession as well; one that is pushing our society even further into the cultural abyss. Not only have we become bored with our own lives, choosing instead to live second-hand through the lives of others, we also are now experimenting with experiencing second-hand deaths. This macabre obsession first surfaced several years ago in the “Bodies” and “Body Worlds” exhibits making the rounds of major American cities. These featured the flayed, “plasticized” bodies of cadavers in varying poses marketed to the public as “art.” The public was and remains so eager to satisfy some grotesque urge to look at these “cool” displays of dead people, that they will pay money to do so.

Now, Europeans are taking this necromania to the next level, with a museum exhibit created by Dutch scientists that employs manufactured smells and sounds to recreate the deaths of famous people like John F. Kennedy, Princess Diana, Muammar Gaddafi, and Whitney Houston. Patrons experience these "famous" deaths by being shoved into darkened, metal, morgue-like boxes and then -- according to media accounts -- exposed to scents such as a recreation of Jackie Kennedy’s favorite perfume or Houston's bath oils, accompanied by sounds such as splashing water and Houston’s voice as she drowns during a drug-laden bath. Presumably the deaths of Diana and JFK are accompanied by the sounds of crashing automobiles and gunshots, in order for the patrons to properly experience their death rush and get their money's worth.

The use of technology for such bizarre and pointless purposes is rapidly turning into the same type of synthetic-sensory experience as that of “Feelies" -- contrived movie theater events described some eight decades ago by Aldous Huxley in his dystopian novel, Brave New World. Huxley described how people were exposed to a manufactured, full-sensory environment in order to weaken their ability to experience truly genuine emotion; thereby facilitating the government's drive to control the citizenry.

All this should serve as a warning sign that we indeed are losing touch with the true meaning of living; found in acts of creation, production, and achievement -- and instead trying to supplement the growing emptiness with second-hand experiences and reality. The problem with the incessant drive for sensorial pleasures is that not only does it cheapen the value of the individualized life experience responsible for positive human achievements, but it turns individuals into budding sociopaths incapable of feeling any sort of emotion that is not provided through external means. We begin to pursue only those things that make us feel happy and safe, without any regard to morality, or understanding of how this blind pursuit of emotional satisfaction is making us pawns to others, including the government.

http://townhall.com/columnists/bobbarr/2014/12/31/technologydriven-narcissism-cheapens-life-and-morality-n1937164/page/full

Ponce
14th March 2015, 08:18 AM
Like everything else which is good it can turn into bad. Even thou I use the WWW I whish that it wasn't, more bad things that good came out of it....family unity is gone, knowledge is gone because learning is gone, the government can spy on you 24/7....and on and on. I could say a lot but all of you know what I know.

V

Horn
14th March 2015, 08:35 AM
Mass production technologies are ultimately self defeating, a doubled edged sword.

While they do add to the masses in present and momentarily, in the long run they reduce it into an isolated suspended/dependent state.

Any benefit short lived. Half-life

Shami-Amourae
14th March 2015, 08:36 AM
Is technology making society better?
Yes. Life is easier. Life expectancy is higher. We care less about survival and more about what sports team is winning.


Has technology allowed you to spend more time doing fun things with actual people (in person)?
No. Why would I want to do that?


Has technology allowed you to spend more time finding love, being in love and sharing your life with an actual member of the opposite sex?
I'm in love with myself.


Has technology made you a more caring person about others, or having more empathy toward others?
I don't know. I have no idea what I'd be like without it.


Has technology enriched your life with the enjoyment of nature, the connection of your surroundings and people?
Yes. I can totally enjoy nature in Far Cry 4.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NIvM9ycGvyM

Or hunt the dreaded Honey Badger!! ;) (Funny)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IAo33nsuDWg

Has technology made you feel more whole and less lonely?
Well its made me actually enjoy and want to be alone. I actually see being around people as a bad thing.

Has technology made you more independent and less self-absorbed?
More independent, but completely self-absorbed.

Has technology given the government less power over you?
Definitely less. I'm able to enjoy my life and have a lot of fun and stay within my own home and not get into any trouble or break any laws.

Horn
14th March 2015, 08:43 AM
Think of society when you had to go down to the corner store to get the newspaper.

all the people you met on the way you'd have a common association with, nowadays there is 0 in common.

JohnQPublic
14th March 2015, 10:44 AM
"Is technology making your life better?"

What is the definition of "is"?

Can you define "is" without using "is"?

Could this the be basis of a war on ISIS (IS-IS)?

Aha! Palani is actually Bill Clinton. I had a suspicion about Palani...

Dogman
14th March 2015, 10:45 AM
Aha! Palani is actually Bill Clinton. I had a suspicion about Palani...

Need to hear his definition of sex again!

;)

JohnQPublic
14th March 2015, 10:50 AM
Think of society when you had to go down to the corner store to get the newspaper.

all the people you met on the way you'd have a common association with, nowadays there is 0 in common.

But, counter to that, you were fed a line of Bull by the one or two newspapers available, and had very little chance of getting more accurate information like you can now on the internet (which I realize is also full of a load of bull also).

As to the overall question I do not know. It used to ake a man an hour to get to work on foot (unless he had a farm, but then he worked 7/18). Now we have cars, so we can sit in traffic for an hour and still get 10-20 times further then we could on foot- but we still take an hour to get there. I guess the benefit is that we have more work options, so we can afford the car to sit in traffic an hour to work everyday. Of course telecommuting is changing that also.

I would say technology has enriched the practical side of our lives, but also enslaved us to pay for that benefit. Not sure what the net benefit is except maybe that more of us have a chance to live longer, and many of us do live more comfortable lives.

Horn
14th March 2015, 11:41 AM
As far as society goes, or an individual having anything in common with his society. Technology is nothing but a detrimate.

Here we dont have anything in common, only our avatars do.

All the information in the world pouring into one skull really has a net zero effect on society.

singular_me
14th March 2015, 12:03 PM
technology and guns share the same traits, they need a mind behind... so I am going to edit: the brainwashing that doesnt make our life better

It is a human emotional condition that the past was always better... blame linear thinking for it :) The present will always demand to stretch it, hence the impression of frustrations and despair. So that explains the mess we are in, I guess. We have an awful disconnect: modernization advances but the (slave) paradigm stays the same. Change this and technology will bring about genuine happiness.

Horn
14th March 2015, 12:25 PM
I'm almost certain it was much more satsfying putting on a robe with no underwear,

and talking amongst ourselves under the Acropolis. :)

mick silver
14th March 2015, 12:48 PM
Technology good are bad feeds the world

Horn
14th March 2015, 01:53 PM
Technology good are bad feeds the world

Industrial or pharmeceutical?

expat4ever
14th March 2015, 04:49 PM
I threw the cell phones away years ago. I have no use for one and whenever I am around people with one it drives me crazy. Be in the middle of a conversation and they have to stop to look at and possibly respond to the text. Even worse if they have to share some misc bullshit with me about the text they just got from the person I dont know................. I do see a use and purpose for them but they seem to have given everyone this amazing self importance like they absolutely have to take that call or text. Probably 99% of cell phone useage is just BS stuff and could be done away with easily.

if you arent pulling down 3-500 k a year then I would ask what my hors are. Once hired and after I start I would make it clear that if I am expected to take calls at all hours then I expect to be compensated for being on call.

The net is another story. I see it as the educational tool that TV could have been. Especially you tube although lately they are starting to get way to many ads as well. I do put up with the ads though because I fond the information learned to be very useful.

Cebu_4_2
14th March 2015, 06:25 PM
HOT BATH without flouride and crap

Ponce
14th March 2015, 07:16 PM
They spend billion of dollars that wont even fly in hot weather when they should spend a few thou on the missiles that are the real weapons on a plane, with good missiles even an old F-16 could go against the best of Russia and China.

V