Politicians are Jungian symbols, policies are facades

(ofthetwodreams.substack.com)

13 points | by SherryFraser 5 hours ago ago

3 comments

  • Frummy 2 hours ago

    Yes, but..

    Policies have direct material influence. Even if 99% dream and believe and talk and think.. That law gets passed that says those mining companies dig beneath those mountains and the board of the mining company don’t have to care about the chemicals or the energy or the environment or the working situation and suddenly there’s heavy metals in the food and the water and thoughts and prayers won’t get the board of the mining company to take different decisions.

    Bad example, there are more direct material effects from just some economic levers influenced by policy and so on. So yes, those deepest layers do matter, but maybe all layers matter just as much as the rest. And at the end of the day the material layer is what influences everyones health and livelihood. Re: someones religious meme with the punchline ’brain explosion: samsara is brahman’

  • voberoi 2 hours ago

    > "I have a dream" doesn't derive its power from any law King helped pass, but from how it reorganized our relationship with possibility.

    ---

    MLK was an incredible organizer whose work helped get the Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Acts passed.

    That isn't a "facade". They're real policy and that is his legacy. His words don't take on mythical status without those significant accomplishments.

    Not only is this article poorly-written and hard to parse with pointless sentences like "We are all legislators in the parliament of consciousness", the author's entire premise is wrong.

    I hope people don't actually think this way. Activists, organizers, and politicians aren't just Jungian symbols or "cultural vibes".

    The policies they fight for, organize around, and enact actually cause things to happen -- for better or worse.

  • SherryFraser 5 hours ago

    Humans Live and Die By Their Myths