all happen? You should know by now: they were just giving the people what they wanted!
But, fuck it, let’s be real: “Give the people what they want” is just #FakeFreedom because what
most of us want are diversions. And when we get flooded by diversions, a few things happen.
The first is that we become increasingly fragile. Our world shrinks to conform to the size of
our ever-diminishing values. We become obsessed with comfort and pleasure. And any possible
loss of that pleasure feels world-quaking and cosmically unfair to us. I would argue that a
narrowing of our conceptual world is not freedom; it is the opposite.
The second thing that happens is that we become prone to a series of low-level addictive
behaviors—compulsively checking our phone, our email, our Instagram; compulsively finishing
Netflix series we don’t like; sharing outrage-inducing articles we haven’t read; accepting
invitations to parties and events we don’t enjoy; traveling not because we want to but because we
want to be able to say we went. Compulsive behavior aimed at experiencing
more stuff is not
freedom—again, it’s kind of the opposite.
Third thing: an inability to identify, tolerate, and seek out negative emotions is its own kind
of confinement. If you feel okay only when life is happy and easy-breezy-beautiful-Cover-Girl,
then guess what? You are not free. You are the opposite of free. You are the prisoner of your
own indulgences, enslaved by your own intolerance, crippled by your own emotional weakness.
You will constantly feel a need for some external comfort or validation that may or may not ever
come.
Fourth—because, fuck it, I’m on a roll: the paradox of choice. The more options we’re given
(i.e., the more “freedom” we have), the less satisfied we are with whatever option we go with.
13
If Jane has to choose between two boxes of cereal, and Mike can choose from twenty boxes,
Mike does not have more freedom than Jane. He has more
variety. There’s a difference. Variety
is not freedom. Variety is just different permutations of the same meaningless shit. If, instead,
Jane had a gun pointed to her head and a guy in an SS uniform screaming, “Eat ze fuckin’
zereal!” in a really bad Bavarian accent,
then Jane would have less freedom than Mike. But call
me up when
that happens.
This is the problem with exalting freedom over human consciousness. More stuff doesn’t
make us freer, it imprisons us with anxiety over whether we chose or did the best thing. More
stuff causes us to become more prone to treating ourselves and others as means rather than ends.
It makes us more dependent on the endless cycles of hope.
If the pursuit of happiness pulls us all back into childishness, then fake freedom conspires to
keep us there. Because freedom is not having more brands of cereal to choose from, or more
beach vacations to take selfies on, or more satellite channels to fall asleep to.
That is variety. And in a vacuum, variety is meaningless. If you are trapped by insecurity,
stymied by doubt, and hamstrung by intolerance, you can have all the variety in the world. But
you are not free.
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