Saturday, December 7, 2013

Amnesiac Objective Childhood Neurosis, and SocioPolitical Economics


Young children are taught by their Mothers to have a fear of being alone. Thereby, their Mothers ensure the security of the young children. The development of the childhood fear of being alone is then relegated to childhood amnesia, for expediency of adaptability to other conditions of life.

Ironically, the personal security imperative of the childhood fear of being alone is lapsed into non-application in the adult employment world, where persons are vulnerable to exploitation of insecure, alienated relations with an employer that is secretly plotting economic harm to the individual, that is now demonstrating a Capitalist non-fear of solitary economic transactions.

Capitalism is a form of economics that allows for a high degree of falsification in order to route resources to a usually unethical entity. Therefore, in order to mitigate the possibility of quasi-criminal exploitation, an individual might encounter via solitary economics dealings, (with the prerequisite of isolation of the individual), it is a effortless exercise to reason there is a need for a democratically controlled support system protecting individuals. What might prevent this reasoning is a hallucinatory transference of the securing role of the parent, (from early childhood), to the parental-like “group of employees controller” - the almost invariably abusive employer.