wolfofwallstreet

Three hours plus previews. Whew! The Wolf of Wall Street was exhausting, exhilarating, impressive and appalling. I didn’t leave my seat, couldn’t miss any of the incredible performances by Leonardo Dicaprio and Jonah Hill, nor the nauseatingly true story line.

Certainly a must see for anyone who needs encouragement to keep their hard earned coin close at hand. Wall Street, Las Vegas and The Lottery all have one goal:  to get the money from your pocket, into theirs.  All of the above institutions are brilliant and relentless in their marketing quest to achieve their goal.  They feed on an emotional emptiness they can smell from miles away.  They graduated at the top of their class in sales, and they are closers.  Despite promises of dreams fulfilled, their end goal is to line their pockets with someone else’s money.   Yes, a tiny number of folks will benefit from their scams, and the pushers will glorify and leverage such events accordingly.

Yet even if you do find the golden ticket, statistics show that over time, not only does the money escape one’s grasp, but recipients who win financial windfalls rarely find perpetual success, self-worth, or happiness.  It is impossible to sustain a feeling through external means. You have to find it within yourself.  You may win a race, and bathe in the glory of success, but that feeling is fleeting.  To achieve the sensation again, you’ll have to win again and win more.  For enduring results, one must learn to generate the feeling independently.   So how about we stay put and generate our own wealth?

The Wolf of Wall Street painted a clear and colorful picture of wall streeters’ soulless hunger for riches, sex, and drugs and satisfying that huger required the conquest of innumerable feckless marks. Rather than jump on their bandwagon in hopes of dining at their tasteless table of unearned riches, how about we keep our money here in Vermont?

Invest in our homes, our land, our townships, our education.  Pay off debt.  Create art.  Make something that causes an audience, a family member, or a passerby to feel, participate and connect.  Rather than giving our power, our money, our space and our energy away to distant predators, lets challenge ourselves to stand up and stand strong and chart our own course,  according to our own values.  This is our home and we know best.  Own that knowledge and never let anyone take it away from you.  Again and again, the sheep will be taken advantage of.  Don’t be sheep.  Hold your ground and stand proud of our unique state. Together we are strong and we have great depth of soul. Viva 802!

January 26, 2014

The Hungry Wolves of Wall Street by A.Muses

Three hours plus previews. Whew! The Wolf of Wall Street was exhausting, exhilarating, impressive and appalling. I didn’t leave my seat, couldn’t miss any of the […]
January 16, 2014

Catching Lightning In a Bottle

Like many other thinking citizens these days, I am fond of demonizing Wall Street. After all, Wall Street deserves demonizing, given the extraordinary corruption, excess and […]
May 9, 2011

Sovereignty and the Money Problem: A New Beginning

In the last several decades many independence movements around the world have been successful and the number of sovereign nations has vastly increased. Have these movements really achieved what they wanted? Or is the goal of political independence a kind of escape valve for aspirations that seek something deeper, something more substantial, than the symbols and trappings of the sovereign state?
May 9, 2010

The Buck Slows Here: Slow Me the Money, Vermont

We must bring money back down to earth. It might have sounded far-fetched even a year ago. But today, surrounded by the politics of a trillion-dollar bailout, it has a different ring. It has the ring of common sense in a world that is coming to real­ize that there is such a thing as intermediation that is too complex and money that is too fast. There is such a thing as money that is too fast.
September 9, 2006

Local Currency: A Revolution That Sounds Like a Whisper

When the French and Russian revolutions overthrew the estab­lished orders in their countries (in 1786 and 1917, respectively), they changed just about everything, but not their monetary systems. — Bernard A. Lietaer, Of Human Wealth
September 9, 2006

Money and Liberty

The U.S. monetary system has been a scandal for a long time; whether it can continue much longer without intolerable social, political, and ecological consequences is an open question. Yet most Americans don’t have a clue about it. “It is well enough that people of the nation do not understand our banking and monetary system,” Henry Ford said, “for if they did, I believe there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning.”
February 17, 2006

The Real Economy

Stories about the economy typically focus on Gross Domestic Product (GDP), jobs, stock prices, interest rates, retail sales, consumer confi­dence, housing starts, taxes, and assorted other indicators. We hear things like “GDP grew at a 3 percent rate in the fourth quarter, indicat­ing a recovering, healthy economy, but with room for further improve­ment.” Or, “The Fed raised short-term interest rates again to head off inflation.” But do these reports, and the indicators they cite, really tell us how the economy is doing? What is the economy, anyway? And what is this economy for?