LizzieMaine
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Carlisle Blues said:As far as a reference point regarding “PLANNED OBSOLESCENCE” Wikipedia is not always a reliable source. My reference points are as follows: Ending the Depression Through Planned Obsolescence (1932) By Bernard London, The Journal of the Mental Environment https://www.adbusters.org/category/tags/obsolescence; Ecommerce – Planned Obsolescence http://pro-webs.net/blog/2009/09/16/ecommerce-planned-obsolescence/. and Ecommerce and Planned Obsolescence By Scott Lindsay
You overlook the fact that London's ideas were not widely accepted at all -- in fact, he was dismissed as a crackpot by the few businessmen of the time who heard of him as coming out out of the same "easy panacea" mold as Howard Scott. London was neither a social scientist nor a manufacturer, but a New York real-estate finagler with an exaggerated sense of his own brilliance, and whose magnum opus was in fact a twenty-page pamphlet, targeting the same kind of wooly-minded drugstore philosophers as went in for Technocracy. His views made no meaningful impact at all on the manufacturing processes of the day.
The philosophical ideas of planned obsolescence may have existed in abstract terms, in pamphlets written by theorists and backroom braintrusters, but the fact remains that they didn't dominate mainstream manufacturing until after World War 2, and they are far more dominant today than they were when they began to attract the notice of social critics in the mid-fifties.
So far as demand goes, people want what they're told to want. If you don't care for Vance Packard -- who I think was one of the most prescient authors of the 20th century -- look up the social critic Benjamin R. Barber, who offers an even more blistering assessment of the situation as it exists today.