[Future] "BUY NOW!" - Building the Future Buddha & the Failure of Buddhism ...

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  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 40693

    [Future] "BUY NOW!" - Building the Future Buddha & the Failure of Buddhism ...

    Dear All,

    I very highly recommend to all a documentary entitled 'BUY NOW!,' a very well-made presentation depicting the ugly cycles of sell, buy, throw away and repeat, stoked by run-away companies inducing run-away consumerism through the creation of fake trends and ever expanding "needs," producing more stuff then we can ever eat, use or wear, much of which eventually gets dumped onto third world garbage mountains, then into the ocean, and into our bodies as micro-plastics and other poisons. You can catch it on Netflix (an organization with its own problems). Brilliantly done.
    .

    I do not say this easily, but it is a failure both of aspects of modern capitalism and of Buddhism. It is also a failure of our modern "green" eco-policies.

    It is a failure of modern Buddhism, unless you are one of the folks who believe that the message of Buddhism is that this world, samsara, was always hopeless, and the point of Buddhism is just to ride the life-raft of Nirvana away from the whole mess. If you are one of those folks, feel free to stop reading here.

    I also do not mean to say that Zen and Buddhism have failed for you and me and everyone. Not at all. Of course, it has NOT been a failure for the thousands and thousands, even millions, of Buddhist practitioners who have found freedom through our Zen and Buddhist practices and teachings even while in this world (I am one of those folks, and I think that you may be one too.) But Buddhism has failed miserably if our goal is to save THE REST, the billions and BILLIONS of sentient beings suffering, during this life, from the poisons of excess desire, clutching, addictions and the other accompanying social ills depicted in the film.

    Some may say that Buddhists should not talk about such things. We should stay away from politics and social policy.

    However, I believe that concern is not a matter of "politics," "left or right" or who one votes for, and is not even simply a matter of "social criticism," but instead goes right to the heart of the diseases that Zen Buddhist practice and the Precepts take as the root of suffering: Unhealthy and excess desires, attachments, becoming lost in material pleasures and "things" as the false sources of happiness and contentment, as well as selfishness and disregard of the environment, social violence, people dying and being injured in wars over resources, people suffering from hunger, homelessness and impacts on mental and physical health that are also the prices we pay. This is at the heart of Zen practice, our way of balance and moderation, as much or more than traditional discussions of the best way to hold a tea bowl gracefully, compose a poem or cook and clean the temple. We can clean the world as practice too.

    I thought about putting this post in our Treeleaf [EcoDharma] section (LINK), because I thoroughly support the goals and ideals there, and believe that we must keep on pushing for change in those ways too. However, I also believe that modern "green" thinking and efforts are generally weak, sometimes intentional misdirections (the films shows what a corporate created fraud upon consumers is the entire current emphasis on "recycling") and bound to be ineffective to counter this tsunami.

    The problem cannot be effectively addressed by first changing the "the economic system" which, once we change it, will then result in taming the greed of human nature, thus solve the problem. That is backwards thinking. We also cannot meditate our way out of those, or march or sign enough petitions, let alone drive our hybrid cars to the recycle bin as the solution. We have this ass backwards, and we primarily need to go in the opposite direction: The effective method will not be found by first changing society in order to change human hearts and desires, but rather, in changing human hearts and desires to change society. The only long term solution is to change human nature directly, right from the heart and mind, which will change the economic system and tame its excesses. We can find in the human body the generosity, satisfaction, moderation, peace and non-violence heralded by Buddhists and others since the beginning of our traditions. I write about this in my book, Building the Future Buddha (LINK)

    An ability to hunger to healthy degrees, but have our hungers satisfied earlier and more easily, would halt excess consumption and all the personal and societal ills that result from excess desires in turn. Could the centers of our brain that trigger feelings of satisfaction be activated earlier, so that we feel “full” with stomachs less than stuffed, experience less compulsion to buy things just to calm ourselves, and are less susceptible to advertising and other visual temptations, which trigger cravings in us? ... Some people are moderate and sensible in their lifestyles and attitudes, while others are not, and there are certainly physiological and psychological keys to unlock as to why these differences exist.

    ... The Buddha and old masters taught their lay followers moderation, to have desires but not in excess, to choose the good and healthful and not the unwarranted, harmful or destructive in their pursuits, and to find peace in heart even amid the struggles that society and the world frequently present in life. ...

    Because people will actually become, from within, better contributors to society, the objections of critical theorists like Slavoj Zizek will be rendered moot: Coming from a neo-Marxist perspective, Zizek argues that modern Western Buddhism, and the meditation it employs, have become tools to render people complacent, ambivalent and numb in our self-absorbed, soul crushing, consumption-driven lives. ... According to such criticism, modern suburban Buddhism and trendy mindfulness practices fool us into thinking that we are radically changing our minds, when all we are doing is perpetuating the conditions of suffering in capitalist society, making us better worker drones and soldiers. ...

    In answer to Zizek, I note that the technologies of the [near] future will allow a peaceful revolution within peoples’ minds and hearts leading to a peaceful revolution in society. For the first time in history ... we might have practical, effective tools to bring the needed changes, not from the top or from the grassroots, but coming from within the human heart and mind. If we alter human character, we will alter society ....
    New methods and medicine, technology and other tools will allow us to reach both the goals of Buddhist practice, and redemption of social problems, in ways that the Buddha and all the ancestors, preachers and prophets and social reformers, were helpless to realize in the past simply because they lacked the means to do so on a wide scale. Now, we will soon have those good means in hand.

    If you ask me, it is our only truly hope.

    Gassho, Jundo
    stlah

    -- In a bit of irony and hypocrisy, here is my Amazon listing for my book ... I doubt that you will ever find the documentary "BUY NOW!" available at Amazon.

    BUY THIS NOW!! ... then responsibly recycle it ...
    tsuku.jpg





    https://www.amazon.com/BUILDING-FUTURE-BUDDHA-Saving-Travel-ebook/dp/B0CQVM3WY8/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=building+the+future+buddha&qid =1703640143&sr=8-1
    Last edited by Jundo; 12-03-2024, 12:55 AM.
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE
  • Ryumon
    Member
    • Apr 2007
    • 1813

    #2
    I haven't watched that documentary, but I'm pretty sure I'm familiar with its topics. I'm the guy who doesn't maintain a subscription to Netflix, only subscribing every few months, and my latest sub actually ran out yesterday. :-)

    As someone who rarely buys clothes, I am stunned at how often people buy new clothes. And the trend among youngish people to buy something - usually a dress, women seem to do this more than men - wear it once, then return it...

    (This said, I recently solved the sock problem. You know, you have a drawer full of socks, and can't easily find a matching pair? I shunted off all my existing socks to a spare drawer, and bought 20 pairs of gray socks. Now I have no trouble finding a pair of socks in the morning.)

    The idea of trends is not new, but hyper-capitalism is to blame for the way this has exploded. I think a lot has to do with the obsession with growth in businesses. Go back 50 years and big businesses were happy to maintain market share, maybe increase it a bit. but they weren't chasing exponential growth to please "the market." Big companies no longer function to make a profit, they function to make their share prices as high as possible. (And, no, the fiduciary duty thing that one may retort, which says a company's main responsibility is to increase share value, is not historical either; it's only been around the past few decades, since the "greed is good" period.)

    And yet, the "degrowth" movement isn't a solution either, because of demographics and other issues (the need to pay for health care and pensions of a lopsided demographic of aging people and not enough young people). So maybe it is buddhism - or some other ism - that can help people overcome their lust for new things.

    This said, there are areas where this actually keeps the market running smoothly. People who lease cars and exchange them every three years feed the market for used cars, which is necessary for the car market to function. But this is one of the most expensive things people ever buy, so it is different from buying clothes every month, or a new phone every year.

    Gassho,

    Ryūmon (Kirk)

    Sat Lah
    I know nothing.

    Comment

    • Jundo
      Treeleaf Founder and Priest
      • Apr 2006
      • 40693

      #3
      (This said, I recently solved the sock problem. You know, you have a drawer full of socks, and can't easily find a matching pair? I shunted off all my existing socks to a spare drawer, and bought 20 pairs of gray socks. Now I have no trouble finding a pair of socks in the morning.)
      Oh, I found an even simpler solution: Just give up on the demand that both socks match. I am happy if they are generally the same color.

      It is a problem in Japan, I admit, as one has to take one's shoes off a lot. But the Japanese are too polite to say anything about socks (except my wife and kids), so it is no bother.

      Gassho, J
      stlah

      PS - I am not going so far as giving up socks altogether, as they are practical. Same for underwear.
      Last edited by Jundo; 12-02-2024, 02:20 PM.
      ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

      Comment

      • Matt Johnson
        Member
        • Jun 2024
        • 502

        #4
        Degrowth isn't the solution it's the result of capitalism.

        Just as Trump isn't the problem he's the result of the rampant inequality leading up to him.

        _/\_
        sat/ah
        matt

        Comment

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