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When everyone sees what is on the end of every fork: Oesterich’s “Pandemic Capitalism”
The pandemic that we got going on around here has gotten me thinking of two separate but related things.
The first is from the novel / literary artefact “Naked Lunch”, where Burroughs described the titular meal as: “The title means exactly what the words say: naked lunch, a frozen moment when everyone sees what is on the end of every fork.”
The second is from Warren Buffet describing the Minskyian Ponzi finance, “Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.”
Both are about moments where everything freezes for a moment and we are allowed reflection in that period between when you realize the fragile bowl has slipped from your hand but right before it really starts falling — you really don’t have time to think but you’re just reacting. It is the filmstrip quality of living life as through a downtempo strobe light is all you have for illumination.
We live moment to moment but need those periods where the moments stop and we can take a moment to reflect. I think that now is the time. The initial fear of the COVID-19 virus has passed as has the initial response in too-spotty but expensive fiscal and monetary reactions from the state (here I’m American-centric because that’s where I’m at).
What the pandemic has done is really exposed where all the cracks have already been. Chris Oesterich in his book “Pandemic Capitalism” looks at both the…