Shopping power
'Look,' she told me one day in a Millsport coffee house. 'Shopping — actual, physical shopping — could have been phased out centuries ago if they'd wanted it that way.'
'They who?'
'People. Society.' She waved a hand impatiently. 'Whoever. They had the capacity back then. Mail order, virtual supermarkets, automated debiting systems. It could have been done and it never happened. What does that tell you?'
At twenty-two years old, a marine corps grunt via the street gangs of Newpest, it told me nothing.
Carlyle took in my blank look and sighed.
'It tells you that people like shopping. That it satisfies a basic, acquisitive need at a genetic level. Something we inherited from our hunter-gatherer ancestors. Oh, you've got automated convenience shopping for basic household items, mechanical food distribution systems for the marginalised poor. But you've also got a massive proliferation of commercial hives and speciality markets in food and crafts which people physically have to go to. Now why would they do that, if they didn't enjoy it?'
I probably shrugged, maintaining my youthful cool.
'Shopping is physical interaction, exercise of decision-making capacity, sating of the desire to acquire, and an impulse to more acquisition, a scouting urge. It's so basically flicking human when you think about it. You've got to learn to love it, Tak. I mean you can cross the whole archipelago on a hover, you never even need to get wet. But that doesn't take the basic pleasure out of swimming, does it?
Richard Morgan, Altered Carbon
Shopping is free fire area for the powerless.
Notes and musings – part I
The very opposite condition, the condition safest for party power, is public apathy, gratitude for small favors and a deep general sense of the futility of politics. Yet there is nothing natural about political apathy, futility and mean gratitude. What lies behind them is not "human nature" but the citizens' belief that politics and government can do little to better the conditions of life; the belief that they are ruled not by the men whom they have entrusted with their power but by circumstances and historical "forces," by anything and everything that is out of human control; the belief that public abuses and inequities are somehow inevitable and must be endured because they cannot be cured. - W. Karp
'Look,' she told me one day in a Millsport coffee house. 'Shopping — actual, physical shopping — could have been phased out centuries ago if they'd wanted it that way.'