Sunday, August 4, 2002

Remora







We like the LA Times -- we love LA -- we don't subscribe to the dismissive La La land stereotype -- but it is difficult for defenders of Southern California seriousness (with our pistols a-blazin'!) to read about the Post-nomadic economy, as breathlessly revealed in the Sunday Times, without, uh, wondering who put the marijuana in the arugala.



First comes the bio -- which we have copied faithfully from on-line:



"Joel Kotkin, a contributing editor to Opinion, is author of "The New Geography: How the Digital Revolution Is Reshaping the American Landscape." He is a senior fellow at the Davenport Institute for Pu"



PU is what you get in Mr. Kotkin and Ms. Susanne Trimbath's take on the new new economy, the one after that recent nasty spate of nomadism -- you remember, reader. There you were, out there with your spear, your seal coat, your tatooed cattle, wandering through desert sands and ice floes and such. Well, no more! Here's what is coming up:



The post-nomadic trend reflects changes that were building up before the stock

market's current turbulence and Sept. 11. As Americans have aged and

become ever more capable of settling where they wish, because of the rise of

digital technology and the dispersal of economic activity, fewer of them than

ever are willing to pick everything up and move in pursuit of quick riches.

Fewer than 15% of Americans change addresses in any given year, down from

a high of 20% in the 1970s. Contrary to popular reporting, most baby

boomers, suggests demographer William H. Frey, "age in place." That is, they

stay where they are. This development suggests that residential property may

be the "gold" of the emerging economy because the home has become more

important to people financially. [LI remark: that homes become the "gold" of an economy as people retain them longer must be a feature of this great new post nomadic paradigm. In the old, stinky paradigm, that houses are built and sold added value to them as investments. But no longer! Mr. Kotkin has discovered that a frozen market is a golden market. Is that great or what? We are all hoping that the Davenport Institute of PU puts him up for a Nobel Prize next year. If they can extract him from his rocking chair, that is -- the man doesn't want to contravene his own paradigm by acting all nomadic, you know).



But post-nomadism is also about values that place greater emphasis on family,

faith and community. At the height of the 1990s stock boom, according to the

Zogby International poll, only one in three Americans defined their "American

dream" in spiritual, as opposed to purely material, terms. By 2000, a spiritual definition was embraced by 42% of Americans. After Sept. 11, the percentage grew to 52% of adults."



When you get poll numbers like that opting for the spiritual, the game is up! Here I'd think that after September 11th, an increasing segment of the population would be reaching for their de La Mettrie, rejecting the afterlife, spewing contempt on the intellectual bankruptcy of the concept of "soul," throwing themselves into libertine lifestyles of finite sensuality, and ever more aware that man is doomed to a brief career of organic vicissitude, after which the worms will go in, and the worms will go out. And what do you know -- Americans start doing American dreamtime as a spiritually defined thing.

No comments:

Post a Comment