There's an opportunity to dovetail the pandemic-hastened restructuring of the 
work force, cancel culture, upward trends in socialism, and climate change. At 
the last salon, I was berated, yet again, for allowing my pet cats free access 
to the outdoors. The tack I took in the conversation, because we weren't just 
chatting, we were "in salon" (whatever that means), was a crypto-criticism of 
Utilitarianism. I chose this because my gank [🎮] of opponents are "ecologists", 
asserting the debatable devastation of domestic cats on biodiversity. Yes, this 
post is also about value alignment and the arrogant grand narrative of Societal 
Engineering for Biodiversity.

I will not be able to retire, nor will most of the people my age or younger. 
Or, you could slip a little on the binding and say most of us have retired many 
times, from many different jobs, to clear space so we can launch a career in 
another dead-end job. What is it we're doing, as a society? If we buy that 
cultural evolution is a thing, what are the operators? Are we witnessing new 
operators or are these the same old operators, just percolating into our 
privileged space from their endemic home amongst the underprivileged classes. 
There are several essays on how tribal life was NOT "nasty, brutish, and 
short", but more laconic ... like a cat's ... explosive efforts of hunt or 
defend, punctuating periods of resting and futzing with the tools. Modern 
"anti-workers" 
<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/oct/27/quit-your-job-join-anti-work-movement-elle-hunt>
 sound a bit like cats, to me.

Of course, there is the stereotype of a solitary stray living under constant 
stress, scraping through dumpsters or hunting moths between desperate fights 
with other strays and their bacteria-poisoned teeth and claws. But this is, I 
think, a bit of a myth born of fallacious inter-species mind-reading by hedonic 
humans. Part of the reason cats are so devastating to "wildlife" is because 
they are not hedonic at all. They've all got a thrill-seeking death wish. Well, 
most do. We have a cat who has a mental illness, maybe many. She stays in her 
Princess Dungeon all day every day, only exiting to use the box or make the 
terrifying journey to the water and food upstairs. But every other cat I've 
ever interacted with is part of the nihilistic thrill-kill cult. Of course 
we'll take the rare opportunity to rest comfy in a dry puff of dirty laundry 
sometimes. But mostly, we'd rather be squinting in the cold rain, statue-still, 
waiting to pounce, chase, kill, and rend.

So, like my cat-hating ecologist gankers, I don't feel pity for the homeless, 
suffering kitten scraping by out there. This is the world. Life sucks. Then you 
die. The trick is learning to enjoy it.

I realize, at the end of my little essay, that it may not be clear how this 
relates to cancel culture or climate change. But, like a joke, explaining it 
ruins it.


[🎮] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_video_game_terms

On 10/27/21 1:32 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> It is confusing to me why retired people would be particularly cautious in 
> their remarks.   What difference does it make if they inflame?  It isn't like 
> they could be fired for it.   Old habits die hard, I guess.    

-- 
"Better to be slapped with the truth than kissed with a lie."
☤>$ uǝlƃ


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