2020-07-24 ------------------------------------------------------------------ Who should we ask if a system we built is a good one? The one who is lifted up by the system or the one who is pushed down? I am imagining an economist having a discussion with a homeless, uneducated street dweller. I am sure it has happened once or twice, but usually it is not let happen. The discussion is a taboo and it would not be allowed to surface on any peer review. The reason the discussion will not happen is that we all who are above those dwellers are on some level aware that we did not deserve any of what we have. At the same time as this idea flickers through our minds we conjure up an opposing force of selfhood that says, at minimum, that we deserved nothing less and even the little we have isn't all that good. "I am in pain too". If you are in pain already why can't you allow a reset? The shame we carry is a cause for inertia. Stay your course and never hurt anyone again. If a reset is triggered there will be new kinds of crimes demanding old kinds of punishment, dealt retroactively. Unleashed shame is a weapon for rebellion. Closeted shame is the weight of history. Thing to notice: Shaming can only work withing a group. You cannot shame me if I have not agreed to be a part of your gang. Public shaming works because people know your alliances. The only active stance against shaming is self-ostracism. When shame is weaponized the world is divided. ------------------------------------------------------------------