Guest Commentary
Social Cycles
and the Coming Golden Age
March 23, 2007
by Michael Nystrom
In
researching my recent series of articles Three
Bears No Goldilocks, I noticed that Ravi Batra recently
published a new book. Batra is probably best known for his late
'80's best seller The
Great Depression of 1990. While the Great Depression of
1990 did not come to pass, the book remains an excellent read for
its introduction to social cycles. All totaled, Batra has written at
least a dozen books, many of which have rather pessimistic titles -
among his last couple were The
Great American Deception, and Greenspan's
Fraud. Both are excellent books, but when I noticed the
optimistic title of his latest work, The
New Golden Age, I was a bit taken aback. Could this be a
contrary indicator? Now that Dr. Batra has turned bullish, is this a
sign that things could really start falling apart, as he has long
been predicting?
Well, it is not quite that simple. Ravi Batra is a cyclical analyst,
and bases many of his predictions on what he calls the Law of Social
Cycles, which was pioneered by his late teacher P.R. Sarkar. I first
encountered this theory about ten years ago when I read the above
mentioned Great Depression of 1990 and it has remained with
me as a useful and interesting way of looking at the world. Batra
re-introduces the theory in Chapter 4 of his latest work, and it is
essential to the understanding of how he believes we will arrive at
the New Golden Age.
The Four Types of People
The Law of Social Cycles states that while people in any society are
all relatively similar - we all have generally the same goals,
desires and ambitions - we differ in the way we go about achieving
our goals. An individual's specific methods for achieving success
depend on his physical and psychological makeup. Essentially, there
are four different types of people who find basic fulfillment in
four different kinds of ways:
- Warriors - have
strong bodies, vigorous physical energy and a sharp intellect.
Warriors tend to develop the skills that take advantage of their
inherent gifts of stamina, courage and vigor. Their mentality is
one that is not averse to taking physical risks. Examples of
people in our society with the warrior mentality include:
Policemen, firemen, soldiers, professional athletes, skilled
carpenters and tradesmen, etc. They all achieve success through
their physical skills and a deep understanding of their
profession. Michael Jordan is an excellent example of a member
of the warrior class.
- Intellectuals -
have a more developed intellect than the warriors, but generally
lack the physical strength and vigor. Intellectuals are happiest
when they try to achieve success by developing and expressing
their intellectual skills and talents. Examples would be:
Teachers, writers, professors, scientists, artists, musicians,
philosophers, doctors and lawyers, and above all, priests.
- Acquisitors - have
a nose for money. If money can be made the acquisitors will find
a way to make it. They are not as bright as the intellectuals,
nor as strong as the warriors, but they are keen when it comes
to making and accumulating money and material possessions. Such
people are the traders, businessmen, managers, entrepreneurs,
bankers, brokers, and landlords in our society.
- Laborers - are
altogether different from the first three groups. Laborers lack
the energy and vigor of the warriors, the keen intellect of the
intellectuals, and the ambition and drive of the accumulators.
In spite of the fact that their contribution to society is
profound - in fact, society could not function without them -
the other groups generally look down upon and tend to exploit
them. The laborers are the peasants, serfs, clerks, short order
cooks, waiters, janitors, doormen, cabdrivers, garbage
collectors, truck drivers, night watchmen and factory workers
who keep society running smoothly by working diligently and
without complaint.
I think we all know people who would fit
into each of the above categories. While all people have a bit of
each of these characteristics, usually only one of the
characteristics is dominant in an individual. And while there is
some social mobility between groups, it is generally fairly limited.
It would be fairly difficult for a sensitive poet to become a
professional soldier, for example. There are two exceptions,
however: All of the classes like money, so it is easy for any of the
classes to acquire the acquisitor mentality, though not necessarily
the skill. Furthermore, members of the other classes can be forced
into the laborer class out the need to support themselves and
families.
Social Classes and Social Cycles
Groups of each type of people make up the social classes in society.
Under this theory, classes are not divided by income level, but
rather by disposition. In any society, it is the warriors who defend
the nation and keep the peace; intellectuals develop religion, art,
law and new inventions; acquisitors manage the farms, factories,
financial institutions and stores; and the laborers do the routine
work - waiting tables, collecting trash, and other low-tech, low
skill jobs. As should be evident, each class contributes something
vitally important to society, and society could not function without
all the classes working together in harmony. Unfortunately, not all
classes are rewarded equally according to their contributions.
Furthermore though all exist simultaneously in society, at any given
time only one of the four classes is the dominant class and
therefore rules society. (The laborers, however, never rule - more
on this later.)
How do you know which is the dominant class? Batra suggests asking
which is the most admired profession in society. If common people
look up to soldiers or other warrior professions (see Starship
Troopers) as the heroes of society, it is an age of
warriors. If the young people aspire to become priests, or enter the
clergy, or become poets or musicians or scientists (yes, such
periods did exist - and still do in other parts of the world) it is
an age of intellectuals. When the majority aspires to become like
the super rich - to make hundreds of millions of dollars with little
or no work, and enjoy private jets and exclusive lifestyles - it is
an age of the acquisitors, as we find ourselves in now.
No single class can remain dominant indefinitely, and power passes
from class to class in a prescribed order, or cycle. The age of
warriors - which bring strict order to society and a return to
fundamental values - is followed by an age of intellectuals, which
over time merges into an age of acquisitors. Batra describes the
progression through the age of acquisitors on page 70:
Once the majority of intellectuals
become acquisitive, materialism degenerates into supermaterialism.
There are no more religious or ethical restraints on the avarice
of the elite, and as the public follows its leaders, everything
gets commercialized.
There comes a point when the intellectual acquisitors are
virtually unchallenged; that is when the process of wealth
concentration runs full throttle, with the rich getting richer and
the poor getting poorer at incredible speeds. The boundless
hypocrisy of acquisitive intellectuals ultimately torments the
majority of people. Salaries go down, and the bulk of society is
forced to devote much of its time to making money. Warriors and
intellectuals then have to become laborers and are left with
little time for the finer pursuits of life. They have to labor
hard to support themselves and their children. The intellectual's
inherent love for art, music, painting and philosophy give way to
routine work all day long to provide the means for family
survival. The warrior's innate predilection for adventure and
sport is replaced by overtime work to make ends meet. The vast
majority of society comes to adopt the laborer's way of living and
thinking.
Only two classes then remain - acquisitors and laborers, or the
haves and have-nots. The age of acquisitors eventually turns into
the age of laborers, which may now be called the
acquisitive-cum-labor age, in which the acquisitive intellectual
is dominant.
For a while, people suffer through the deceit and exploitation of
the reigning class. They maintain their lifestyle by increasingly
getting into debt. Acquisitors now have a field day. They make
money left and right. They enrich themselves through their control
over businesses, farms, and factories, and through lending money
to the other classes.
This is right about where we as a
society find ourselves now, Batra argues. As the acquisitors have
become dominant, most members of the other classes have been forced
into to the laboring class in order to support both themselves and
the appetites of the acquisitors (through interest payments on
debt). At the same time, nearly everyone aspires to the lifestyle of
the acquisitors -- those who don't are society's misfits and
outcasts. Further, the acquisitors make a show of making it seem
possible that such a lifestyle is available to anyone, if only you
would just work harder (or smarter). For example, see Trump and
Kiyosaki (Rich Dad)'s book, Why
We Want You to be Rich.
But the acquisitor age is just the flip side of the age of laborers
-- the acquisitor-cum-laborer age, as Batra calls it. Laborers are
in the majority, but the acquisitors are the ones holding the reigns
of power.
This age of laborers is characterized by:
- A breakdown of the family unit due
to divorce
- Rampant crime (including white
collar) and disrespect for the rule of law
- Extremely loose morals and high
rates of prostitution
- Neglect of the children and the
elderly
- A general aversion to mental and
physical discipline
- A culture of "supermaterialism"
and a thriving drug culture (legal and illegal)
- The commercialization of
everything, including art, religion, music, sports, adventure,
etc.
- A religion of fear and educational
decline
- Intellectual dishonesty and the
spread of dogma
- Low status for women, due to the
prevalence of divorce, prostitution and pornography
- Divided and decentralized
government
- Acquisitive politicians dominating
politics but sharing power with laborers.
Aside from the last three on the list -
women still have an elevated status, the government, though divided
remains centralized, and there is little power sharing with laborers
that I can see - these characteristics describe fairly well the era
we are living through now.
For younger people - say under 40 - this kind of lifestyle is all we
have ever known, and therefore we tend to believe that things have
always been like this and always will be. People over 40 may
remember a time when society was different, when morals were
stricter, when people stayed married, courtesy and honor played more
prominent roles in relationships, and some things remained sacred.
These are characteristics of a previous age.
The power of this theory is in the ability to step back and place
our current way of life into a larger context. We can use the theory
to see clearly where we have been, as well as where we are going. As
more and more people tire of life on the money treadmill, a new era
begins to take shape, just as spring always and inevitably takes
shape from winter. Disgruntled intellectuals and warriors displaced
into the laborer class join forces with the masses to bring about
massive social change. Such a change is known as a revolution and
with it comes the dawing of a new age.
One of my favorite quotes, from Peter Drucker's 1993 book Post
Capitalist Society goes:
Every few hundred years in Western
Civilization, there occurs a sharp transformation . . . Within a
few short decades, society rearranges itself - its worldview; its
basic values; its social and political structure; its arts; its
key institutions. Fifty years later, there is a new world, and the
people born can't even imagine the world in which their
grandparents live and into which their own parents were born.
We are currently living through just such a transformation.
The larger point is that things are not
static - they never are. In fact, with the rapid rollout of
technology and the educational potential it brings, things now are
less static than they have probably ever been.
The idea of revolution may not sound like something to be optimistic
about, but Batra points out that revolutions need not be violent. If
the revolution is led by warriors, yes it probably will be - but
this country already had one violent revolution. It is not necessary
that we repeat the event.
As Batra puts it:
Rebelling against the elite is not
easy; it takes immense courage to oppose a regime and become a
revolutionary. So those who muster such courage, no matter what
their initial grouping, are the true soldiers who then start
another warrior age, which begins with an ascending or magnanimous
phase. With the return of the warrior mentality, many features of
the first eras of warriors make a comeback, but some novel and
progressive institutions also appear because of inevitable social
evolution through time. The acquisitors, having lost their
credibility, go back to a lower status. The public remembers their
acts of oppression and imposes restraints on their
acquisitiveness. This way the social cycle goes on and on..."
In other words, if the revolution is led
by intellectuals, there is no reason it need be violent. The
dissolution the British as well as Soviet Empires were both
revolutionary changes that took place with very little bloodshed.
We can already see the seeds of a new era being sown and sprouting.
One of the major signs is the increasing awareness of the problems
that our current way of living creates - socially, psychologically,
economically, environmentally and spiritually. Just one such example
is this article: Why
Having More No Longer Makes Us Happy. Yes, this era is winding
down in an endgame, but the ending is just a prelude to a new
beginning. I will have much more to say about this in future
installments.
But
don't get too excited just yet. Before we get to the New Golden Age
that Batra speaks of, things are probably going to have to get much
worse for many people. This creates the impetus for massive change,
as people reach a point where they can no longer stand the
prevailing conditions and are moved to take action. But Batra makes
the point that the future is not set in stone. With knowledge of the
social cycles, we can help speed it up through our own actions, and
with awareness of how it is likely to unfold, we are better armed to
stay out of harm's way.
So how much worse will things get, and how much longer until the
Golden Age? That comes next week, in Part II of my review. Please
sign up to my low volume email announcement list if you would like
to be notified when it is available.
Comments
on this story are welcome here
- - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - -
Also of Interest:
Charles
Zentay: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
Ron
Paul: Don't Blame the Market for Housing Bubble
Must See Video:
Video:
The Secret Government - Bill Moyers
Video:
Why We Fight
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