bird icon for twitter


Just Say No to Surveillance Capitalism

How social physics teams up with the drug war to give a knock-out blow to human transcendence

by Ballard Quass, the Drug War Philosopher




January 12, 2020

s Shoshana Zuboff reveals in her 2019 book "The Age of Surveillance Capitalism," one of the biggest cheerleaders of that new data-based economic system is Professor Alex "Sandy" Pentland of MIT, an expert in the creation of creepy software designed to harvest data about a wired Netizen's feelings and intentions. But Pentland's goals are more ambitious than just enabling a new approach to economic control. He envisions a Skinnerian world run according to the mathematical principles of "social physics," a brave new world in which humans are controlled by the once-maligned processes of operant conditioning, with the behavior of formerly free citizens being nudged and corralled by data-controlled algorithms designed to steer their actions in "beneficial" directions, at least as the term "beneficial" is defined by Pentland's deep-pocketed clients.

"Such dehumanization sucks," you may say, "because it treats human beings as widgets. But what does it have to do with the Drug War and the DEA?"

Consider:

When the Conquistadores arrived in South America, they immediately saw the ritual use of psychoactive plants as demonic. Why? Because their rational European mind was laden with a material bias that denied any special abilities to the conscious mind. The idea that psychoactive plant use could open up new useful visions was therefore entirely foreign to them. They therefore had no compunction in abolishing such plant-based rituals, often abolishing the tribes that practiced them, too, for good measure.

The Conquistadores' attack on the humanity of indigenous peoples can be seen as part one of a two-part process of social control spanning half a millennium. The Conquistadores stole the soul from the indigenous people in the 1600s by denying them one customary means of self-transcendence. Now, hundreds of years later, Social Physics has come along to tell us how the social reality of the dispossessed can be re-created, not through transcendent experiences with plants, of course (since the materialist Conquistador mentality maintains its grasp on the western mind, even in post-colonial times), but through the robotization of humankind.

Viewed in this light, all Americans (and the world, for that matter) face the plight of those indigenous people, for we have all been barred from accessing transcendence through plants, thanks to the Drug War. And now, to add insult to this unconstitutional injury, materialists like Pentland come along to quantify the soulless residuum of our lives with algorithmic formulas to ensure that our stymied ambitions for transcendence become acceptable to us as the new status quo. If we're unhappy about being transformed into Pentland's predictable data-making robots, not to worry: algorithms will be written that will sense our distress and take appropriate action, adding a smiley face to our online calendar, perhaps, along with a link to a feel-good article about puppies that were recently rescued from a puppy mill.

Pentland's ideal world seems to be one in which the richest capitalists are happy and the rest of us are pacified. This is a world that uses the average person as a widget to ensure the happiness of the top 1%. It is a despotic project that sees efficiency as the ultimate good, while viewing personal transcendence as the enemy. Why? Because transcendence can result in behavioral changes that cannot be predicted by data-crunching algorithms, changes that may even predispose some to overthrow the whole Big Brother project of social control entailed by social physics.

When it comes to humanity's desire for personal transcendence, the Drug War has already knocked us down "for the count." Now Pentland's "social physics" wants to come along and deliver the coup de grĂ¢ce to our aspirations, by using data-based algorithms to construct a reality in which humanity will be taught to make its peace with a strictly material and economically focused world.

Conclusion: It's time to just say no to surveillance capitalism.

Author's Follow-up: August 19, 2022






Some may say that I'm paranoid for suggesting that the Pentlandian computer nerds want to pacify the hoi polloi to make them good consumers, to which I say: Wakey-wakey. The nerds have already done it. One in four American women take Big Pharma meds every day of their life, including anti-depressants whose chief acknowledged benefit is to keep folks satisfied with the status quo (as opposed to vouchsafing them even the slightest hint of self-transcendence, that is). We live in an age of Stepford Wives -- and Stepford Husbands and even Stepford Toddlers -- since Big Pharma is always out to find new markets, even if it means talking up the merits of prophylactic drugs for kids, ostensibly to nip conditions like OCDC and borderline personality in the juvenile bud. Paging Margaret Atwood! She's great at pointing out the tyrannies that could be -- but blind to the tyrannies that ARE.

Indeed, consider the notion that all chronic sadness should be recognized and treated as depression. That assumption gives a free pass to government to be as non-responsive and heartless as it wishes, since no one thinks to trace the causes of their unhappiness to a corrupt system -- like, say, one that has the unparalleled gall to outlaw the medicines of mother nature. This is why I say that the Drug War causes depression, and the psychiatric industry benefits from this fact by medicalizing that depression, thus ensuring that the unhappy person blames their situation on brain chemicals rather than on the powers that be. So rather than fighting against the real problem -- the government usurpation of natural rights -- the bamboozled depressed turn themselves over to psychiatry, saying, "do with me as you scientifically will." And what does psychiatry do? Give them pills that will help them eke out a life in the midst of tyrannical laws, and therefore keep them from recognizing and confronting the true enemy of the "patient's" happiness: namely rich lawmakers who are doing everything they can to keep the number of trouble makers to a minimum. And so the advice "Take your pills" now takes the place of the old-school advice to "fight for your rights."




Next essay: Rationality Uber Alles
Previous essay: Tune In, Turn On, Opt Out

More Essays Here


POLITICS AND THE DRUG WAR

"When two men who have been in an aggressive mood toward each other take part in the ritual, one is able to say to the other, 'Come, let us drink, for there is something between us.' " re: the Mayan use of the balche drink in Encyc of Psych Plants, by Ratsch & Hofmann
What are drug dealers doing, after all? Only selling substances that people want and have always had a right to, until racist politicians came along and decided government had the right to ration out pain relief and mystical experience.
And these are the people that Trump has promised to execute if he is elected.
Most prohibitionists think that they merely have to use the word "drugs" to win an argument. Like: "Oh, so you're in favor of DRUGS then, are you?" You can just see them sneering as they type. That's because the word "drugs" is like the word "scab": it's a loaded political term.

essays about
POLITICS AND THE DRUG WAR

How the Drug War gave the 2016 election to Donald Trump
How the US Preventive Services Task Force Drums Up Business for Big Pharma
Another Cry in the Wilderness
Why Congressman Kevin Kiley Should be Charged with Murder
How Drug Warriors Steal American Elections
The media, not the FDA, approves drugs in America
America's Anti-scientific Standards for Psychotherapeutic Medicine
The word 'drugs' is a political term
How the Drug War killed Leah Betts
Response to: 95% of Americans Favor Legalizing Drugs
Why Clinton Was Wrong about Drugs
Richard Nixon Gets the Last Laugh on Baby Boomers
The Partnership for Misleading Kids about Drugs



front cover of Drug War Comic Book

Buy the Drug War Comic Book by the Drug War Philosopher Brian Quass, featuring 150 hilarious op-ed pics about America's disgraceful war on Americans



You have been reading an article entitled, Just Say No to Surveillance Capitalism: How social physics teams up with the drug war to give a knock-out blow to human transcendence, published on January 12, 2020 on AbolishTheDEA.com. For more information about America's disgraceful drug war, which is anti-patient, anti-minority, anti-scientific, anti-mother nature, imperialistic, the establishment of the Christian Science religion, a violation of the natural law upon which America was founded, and a childish and counterproductive way of looking at the world, one which causes all of the problems that it purports to solve, and then some, visit the drug war philosopher, at abolishTheDEA.com. (philosopher's bio; go to top of this page)