Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Should We Outlaw Credit Cards?

The other day at coffee Rohan raised the possibility of outlawing credit cards entirely. The idea has appeal. Easy credit makes it too easy for people to drown in debt. And with such high limits on interest rates, credit card companies have turned into usury firms. Remember how the only thing that really pissed Jesus off was the money changers?

On the other hand, I was glad to have a credit card in college when my clients decided they didn't need to pay me until after my tuition deadline. Still, I could probably have come up with some other way to get the money to the bursar, especially if I didn't know I had the credit card backup.

So how about this: we outlaw credit cards for individuals while maintaining credit provisions for businesses. Debit cards have all the convenience without the quicksand, and they force the issue of only spending money that you actually have. At the very least personal credit cards should be way harder to get, with way lower credit limits, and way lower interest rates. And every high school should require all students to pass an economics class about how debt works and how to stay out of it.

T Minus One Day

Went to Santa Fe yesterday for bike repairs and made the following purchases:

$4.86 -- 3 Presta-to-Schrader valve converters for pumping bike tires
$ .55 -- 3 manuscript-sized manila envelopes for story submissions
$1.34 -- 1st class postage for mailing one story

Total: $6.75. Seems like nothing, I know, but buying those envelopes and mailing the story gave me pause. The story is virtually guaranteed to be rejected, so why spend the money, time, & emissions to ship it across the country? I suspect ego involvement.

Monday, September 29, 2008

We're a Nation of Consumers, and That's OK!

Note how the lies have been seductively laced with a dash of truth. Discover wants us to maintain as much debt as we possibly can without actually going bankrupt (which would compromise our ability to keep paying interest):

The Smarty Pants Chime In

Henry David Thoreau:

“…the cost of a thing is the amount of what I will call life which is required to be exchanged for it, immediately or in the long run.” -Walden

Reverend Billy:

“Can I get a Change-alujah?” -What Would Jesus Buy?

Eckhart Tolle:

“How do you let go of attachment to things? Don’t even try. It’s impossible. Attachment to things drops away by itself when you no longer seek to find yourself in them.” -A New Earth

William Wordsworth:

“Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers…” -The World Is Too Much with Us

Robert Sardello:

“It is helpful for us to have a sense that when something of a prepackaged nature comes to us the packaging is like a Trojan horse. Filled with active forces of death, it comes in highly interesting, attractive, and desirable packages.” -Silence

Tyler Durdon:

“I say let’s evolve and let the chips fall where they may.” -Fight Club

Monkey Mind

Two days until the shopping stops and my greedy little monkey mind keeps suggesting silly things to buy. Like a sieve. And a pencil box for knitting needles. A pretty dress. New shoes. A playlist from iTunes. Last Saturday I did make two purchases: a cable to connect the camcorder to my computer (for the sake of a politically-motivated video project), and slippers from LLBean, in order to use a $10 coupon from them before it expired. They got me good with that manipulation.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Answers to All Your Questions

Q: What’s the goal here — to save money? Lower the carbon footprint? Punish yourself?
A: It just seemed like a good idea. Save money, sure. Keep junk out of landfills and carbon out of the atmosphere, you bet. Live more intentionally, consciously, authentically, yeah. All that good stuff. None of which feels like a punishment.

Q: What metrics will you use to measure your success?
A: Not a single one. It’s about paying attention, not spreadsheets.

Q: What will you do when the urge to buy something comes up?
A: Stop and notice it, see how it feels, but don’t let it make decisions.

Q: What about Amazon gift certificates? That’s not like buying something, is it?
A: It is exactly like buying something!

Q: How about craigslist?
A: I’m not sure what that is but if it means cluttering up your life with more stuff, regard it with suspicion.

Q: Surely it’s ok to buy movie tickets.
A: I think I'd rather not. The idea is to take a break from consumer culture for a minute and see what it feels like.

Q: Ok then, smarty pants, are you going to give up Netflix?
A: Well, Netflix is renting, not purchasing. Plus Spencer clutched his throat when I suggested suspending the little red envelopes.

Q: Are you allowed to get massages?
A: Definitely. Massages are encouraged, always. Think of it as an energy expense.

Q: What's a punkin sneezer?
A: That's an excellent question.

I Want to Kiss Bill Moyers

And you might too after you watch this video.