Here in the West, a lifestyle of unnecessary spending has been
deliberately cultivated and nurtured in the public by big business.
Companies
in all kinds of industries have a huge stake in the public’s penchant
to be frivolous with its spending, and in the documentary "The
Corporation," a marketing psychologist shows just how easy it is to
increase sales by targeting nagging children, and the effect that
nagging has on the parents’ spending.
“You can manipulate
consumers into wanting, and therefore buying your products. It’s a
game,” - Hughes, co-creator of “The Nag Factor.”
This is only one
small example of something prevalent in our culture, that companies
don’t make sales by promoting the virtues of their products, but by
creating a culture of hundreds of millions of people that buy pointless
stuff to chase away dissatisfaction. This is reminiscent of the analogy
of culture as “hungry ghosts”; a culture of people who constantly want
and need, but are never satisfied.
We buy stuff to cheer
ourselves up, to keep up with the Jones’, to fulfill our childhood
vision of what our adulthood would be like, to broadcast our status to
the world, and for a lot of other psychological reasons that have very
little to do with how useful the product really is. How much stuff is in
your basement or garage that you haven’t used in the past year?...<<<Read More>>>...
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