Warner Brothers comes swinging its massive male member (yes, a vulgar
metaphor, but nothing else quite does it) into New Zealand, growling,
“Hey, wankers, suck this.” New Zealand falls to its knees, goes, “Okay,
sir. What else can we do for you?” “Give us $25 million, and we’ll
call it even.” So the kiwis do that, too.
Can it be? Hollywood is now calling the legislation in New Zealand?
Labor laws have changed to accommodate Peter Jackson who did not want to
negotiate with a union? And some of the business community is
approving?
New Zealand is not an especially obvious consumer society. Close
beneath the veneer of their friendly surface roils that surliness
characteristic of a massive national inferiority complex. People and
cultures with inferiority complexes are dangerous. So they sort of
pretend to value your business until you ask them for something and
suddenly they flip out, as if you have somehow questioned their manhood.
They can’t quite figure out how to do sales. They never caught on to
the idea that it shouldn’t cost you MORE to buy the large economy size
than two of the small sizes. They consistently screw up at the cash
register. No, this is not a society that values consumers. Modern life
is not quite under control in New Zealand.
If you deplore the creation of the consumer, the society seems more
authentic, more serious, at first, than flagrantly client-oriented
societies. But then you start to recognize that the only difference
between New Zealand and the civilized world is that these people are
poorer. Their income is about half of what it is in Australia, western
Europe, and North America. If they could figure out how to be consumers
on the scale of the rest of the western world they WOULD do it. There
is no virtue in their lack of possession or inability to sell things.
They just don’t know how to be otherwise.
This is why the sight of John Keyes forcing legislation through the
Parliament at the demand of Hollywood is so appalling. It lays bare the
myth that New Zealand is a nice little place where people are poor but
happy and genuine. For a few dollars they are ready to prostrate
themselves before the Hollywood icon, which is something you aren’t
going to see, even in the US. Especially in the US. Is this
democracy?? The US is screwed up, but at least directors don’t decide
the law.
There just isn’t any safe place in the whole world. The universe if run
by business, and the desires of business are by definition good. No
questioning of that basic premise. This is Nietzsche and Beyond Good
and Evil, part 2. "The noble type of man experiences itself as
determining values; it does not need approval; it judges, 'what is
harmful to me is harmful in itself'." New Zealand sometimes pretends
to disdain the vile exploitation, moral and physical, perpetrated by the
masters of the universe, but it has shown once and for all that it
wants to play. When the little guy stands up to the big guy it is
touching. But when it trails the big guy around asking for a couple of
scattered crumbs, it is just pathetic.
No comments:
Post a Comment