LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,766
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
As McLuhan had it, first we shape our tools, and then our tools shape us.
In keppitalist America, internet search you.
As McLuhan had it, first we shape our tools, and then our tools shape us.
There's also the way the internet tends to make all information equal. But despite what the Wikipedia mentality want to tell us, *facts* are not a matter of social or political consensus.
The cellphone plague is at its worst in American supermarkets. People will think nothing of blocking entire aisles by parking their carriages crosswise and then standing in front of or behind them, yapping into their squawkboxes about inconsequential nonsense that could easily wait until they were someplace other than blocking my access to the cat food display. I have on many occasions turned around, walked all the way around the next aisle and then up the desired aisle from the other direction to get at what I need, only to find that they've shifted their position so they're now blocking it from a different angle. "They'll Do It Every Time."
I'm almost certain that someone, somewhere out there, knows more about me than I do.In keppitalist America, internet search you.
I'm almost certain that someone, somewhere out there, knows more about me than I do.
Well, if you have bought on line, your credit card company knows, the vendor knows, the carrier knows and I wouldn't mind betting that your broadband supplier knows. If you use your card to do your shopping your bank knows what you spent, when you spent it, how often you spend. If you have a store loyalty card, the store will know every single purchase, the time bought, the amount paid and how often you spend. Add to that mix all the things like your utilities, tax returns and anything to do with officialdom and you can see how quickly a profile is built up on you. Then they come out with some B/S about if you are above board, what have you got to hide? This is to keep you adding to the profile. What they don't tell you is that they sell all that information.I'm almost certain that someone, somewhere out there, knows more about me than I do.
You, the Sacred Individual, are as much a commodity in today's world as a can of cling peaches. Your purpose is to be stacked, stored, inventoried and sold, and in the end, to feed the machine.
You, the Sacred Individual, are as much a commodity in today's world as a can of cling peaches. Your purpose is to be stacked, stored, inventoried and sold, and in the end, to feed the machine.
How is any of this different than any other epoch in history? Slave to serf to servant to sales pitch.
Plus ca change, plus c'est pareil.
Well, if you have bought on line, your credit card company knows, the vendor knows, the carrier knows and I wouldn't mind betting that your broadband supplier knows. If you use your card to do your shopping your bank knows what you spent, when you spent it, how often you spend. If you have a store loyalty card, the store will know every single purchase, the time bought, the amount paid and how often you spend. Add to that mix all the things like your utilities, tax returns and anything to do with officialdom and you can see how quickly a profile is built up on you. Then they come out with some B/S about if you are above board, what have you got to hide? This is to keep you adding to the profile. What they don't tell you is that they sell all that information.
How is any of this different than any other epoch in history? Slave to serf to servant to sales pitch.
Plus ca change, plus c'est pareil.
No, Bill Gates! He probably has more information on the people of Earth then any one else!When it comes to "Big Brother", I fear Google more than the government.
I personally never trust a company who mentions evil in their motto... in any capacity.
Victimized again today by that bane of my driving life, the "blocked lane on a major road because cars are back up entering the drive-thru of a flippin Tim Hortons donut shop".