dragonrider wrote:What a substance wrote:And for sure, envy is obviously a very common and ultimately a very ugly trait.
Yes, you're right. It has an ugly side.
But the thing is: I think that, especially since the fall of the berlin wall, we have been conditioned to belief in social darwinism. The idea that personal succes eventually is simply a matter of choice, so that those of us who don't get to own a big Mercedes are just losers who realy don't deserve any better.
But quite a few people have been losing out quite a bit, on all the fun stuff a growing economy has provided us with over the past couple of decades.
For instance, most people who've lost their homes to hurricane Harvey, don't exactly fall in the category of 'people who own a big shiny Mercedes benz'.
So there are many people who miss out on a lot of things, who then, on top of all the frustration that fact alone would bring, are being looked down upon. Treated as parias.
What's uglier: the envy those people feel towards the rest of society, or the fact that society has become so extremely unfair, and the fact that so many of society's 'winners' have become so arrogant?
OK, this comment is maybe a bit unclear.
What i meant is that maybe, if the desparity between the lives of society's 'winners' and 'losers' becomes too big, you cannot realistically expect the losers NOT to envy the winners.
Successes and losses tend to accumulate. An example: say, you make more money than me. OK, fine, good for you. But now you can hire the services of a tax-adviser, and because of that you don't just make more money than i do, now. Now you are also claiming a sort of 'reward' for making more money than me, in the form of tax-cuts. That's realy the point where you would start to lose my sympathy.
I think that maybe, some recent political events in america and the UK could for a large part be explained by the hate, the deep, burning, passionate hate, that people in the american rustbelt feel towards California and new-york, and people in some parts of england feel towards london. A hate that i can totally understand.
I don't think it's a proper excuse for a lot of the ugly things we've been seeing lately.
But when your jobs are being ofshored by some manager from his office in london or new york, or innovated away by sillicon valey, while you're constantly being showered by hollywood and social media, with images of how the rich and famous people live, the 'beautiful people' with their yoga-apps and their vegan-sushi-diets...yeah, i can understand the hate.
So i mean, yes, it's an ugly trait. But maybe it's society's 'winners' who're mostly responsible for it, and not Always the envious themselves.
Anyway, i think it's quite dangerous in the sense that what we're seeing realy could be the dissintegration of society itself. People's worlds have grown so far apart, and it has become so incredibly difficult to move from one world to the other, that large groups of people have effectively become second or third grade citizens. And i don't think you can expect people to just accept that.