System Agent: Difference between revisions

From The SpiritWiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 27: Line 27:
[[Is a related LP term::Maya| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::Maya| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::System Maintenance| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::System Maintenance| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::Indoctrination| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::Creation Template| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::Ideology| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::Toxic Socialization| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::Toxic Socialization| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::Mechanisms of Compliance| ]]
[[Is a related LP term::Mechanisms of Compliance| ]]

Revision as of 14:06, 16 Haziran 2024

A System Agent is an individual who works, either unconsciously or consciously, and with more or less clarity, to maintain and expand the extant Regime of Accumulation (i.e. The System).[1]

System Agent Types

System Agents > Agent of Consciousness, Agents of Socialization, Corporate Cultural Creative, System Architect, System Enforcer

Related LP Terms

System Agent > Containment, Regime of Accumulation, System Maintenance, Toxic Socialization

Non-LP Related Terms

System Agent > Containment, Regime of Accumulation, System Maintenance, Toxic Socialization

Notes

System agents come in many shapes and sizes, and from all colours of the rainbow.

In capitalist societies, education, whether secular or religious, the teaching of moral reflexes handed down from father to son, the exemplary integrity of workers decorated after fifty years of loyal and faithful service, the fostering of love for harmony and wisdom, those aesthetic forms of respect for the status quo, instill in the exploited a mood of submission and inhibition which considerably eases the task of the agents of law and order. In capitalist countries, a multitude of sermonizers, counselors, and "confusion-mongers" intervene between the exploited and the authorities.[2]

Footnotes

  1. Sosteric, Mike. Rocket Scientists’ Guide to Money and the Economy: Accumulation and Debt. St Albert, Alberta: Lightning Path Press., 2016.
  2. Frantz Fanon, The Wretched of the Earth (New York: Grove Press, 1963), 4.