Causes Less Than Yourself

When someone recruits you for a Cause Greater Than Yourself, run, especially if it’s a government doing the recruiting.

Guest post by Robert Gore at Straight Line Logic

This time of year prompts tributes to Causes Greater Than Yourself (CGTY). You’re to count your blessings and rededicate yourself to one or more such causes. Christianity may be on the wane, however, a panoply of secular CGTY have sprung up to replace it and its good works, purportedly filling voids in souls. What’s best not to think about—if you wish to preserve your sanity—is how much of your life you’re devoting to causes less than yourself.

The widow of a dead soldier asks the questions, perhaps as she glances at the flag that draped her husband’s coffin, folded into its triangle, displayed in its case on the fireplace mantel. A veteran, broken in body, mind, and spirit, living in an apartment through the thin walls of which he can hear the neighboring couple when they make either love or war, asks the questions as he drains his coffee laced with whiskey. Was it worth it? Did they lose what they lost in a cause greater than themselves? These are questions those who have lost nothing or have everything don’t ask, but torment those who have lost.

For some the answer is yes. The“righteous cause” rhetoric is out the window with the first combat or IED. What remains, what’s real, are survival and your fellow soldiers. Military annals are full of the heroism of those who gave some or all to save their brothers, heroism that transcends the official reasons for war. They were wounded or killed for those they cared about, who cared about them and would have done the same. If they survived, they have that comfort; if they didn’t, their loved ones do.

Military annals are also full of senseless wars waged for stupid and corrupt reasons. The US government has added many such chapters in pursuit of a global order subservient to its commercial and political interests. These interests have no connection to the actual defense of the United States. Politicians, the military and intelligence bureaucracies, contractors, and US allies, including freeloading welfare states and repressive regimes, reap the benefits. Those doing the fighting bear the cost.

To say that those who pay—idealistic, perhaps naively so, often young and in the prime of their lives—are serving causes greater than themselves is to make a mockery of the concept. They are sacrificed to empire building, hypocrisy, and corruption. They and their loved ones can only conclude, with understandable bitterness, that their sacrifices were not worth it.

Nothing can exceed or match such sacrifice. Unfortunately, sacrificing good to evil is standard operating procedure for governments. The mother lode for warfare and everything else governments do is what they extract from the productive. What producers pay is not comparable to losing life or limb in combat, and some of their taxes go to the those doing the fighting or those who previously fought. However, that’s only a small percentage of the government’s budget. For the rest of it, think of the time and effort those taxes represent: trillions of hours. For the productive, it’s a meaningful portion of their lives, their irretrievable time. Is it worth it? Do they lose for causes greater than themselves?

Only idiots irredeemably beyond useful would answer those questions in the affirmative. Most taxes go into someone else’s pocket, with a not insignificant diversion to Washington, the nation’s richest metropolitan area. They fund programs that make problems worse—like Obamacare—and all those senseless wars. They pay salaries for regulators enforcing a Himalayan stack of laws and regulations that make it difficult or impossible for producers to produce. Despite the trillions the government extracts, it cannot make ends meet, so a chunk of taxes goes towards interest on the ever-increasing debt. Regardless of whether its citizens can fund themselves, the government always finds a way to fund itself.

THE PRIME DECEIT IS THAT

THEY CARE ABOUT YOU

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AMAZON PAPERBACK

KINDLE EBOOK

Speaking of taxes going into someone else’s pocket, did a single producer get a nice Thank You note or holiday card this Christmas season? You’d think that a few of the millions of beneficiaries of government’s coercive redistribution might express some gratitude to those from whence their bounty was extracted. It never happens. Many believe they are entitled to what they get, that producers should be grateful for the opportunity to devote themselves to a cause greater than themselves—supporting the unproductive.

With religious fervor “social justice” CGTY are pushed by adherents who mostly shun traditional religion: income equality, environmental preservation at all costs, global warming climate change, the rights of heretofore marginalized sexual and gender minorities, and open immigration. These CGTY are given halos like “holistic, “dreamers” “pay it forward,” and “give back.” You’d be hard pressed to pick up a popular periodical devoid of the lingo. Corporate America, ever attuned to shifting trends, features this goo in its advertising, press releases, and annual reports. Whole Foods and Tesla make purchasing organic vegetables or electric cars CGTY. Starbucks sells a water called Ethos—morally transcendent H20!

The idea is to turn all the right causes into CGTY. They have a common leitmotif: elevate the collective, diminish the individual. It’s absurd to say: “Do it for a cause greater than yourself, do it for yourself.” That’s why it’s always: “Do it for fill in the blank collective.” Only a few hardy individualists ever resist the crowd and its causes, usually at great personal cost. For the rest, it’s join now, and often, regret later.

It is SLL’s New Year’s wish that you freely choose the causes you deem worthy of your time, energy, and money, and spend not one second more than you’re compelled to on causes less than yourself.

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24 Comments
David Shumaker
David Shumaker
December 31, 2016 4:04 pm

I sure didn’t get a “thank you” note. Thanks for the article and reminding me.

javelin
javelin
  David Shumaker
December 31, 2016 6:47 pm

Neither did my wife and I for the $34 GRAND the government confiscated this year from us in Fed, State and County taxes.
That nice chunk of our hours and hours of labor was taken from us and given away ( except for the beauracratic cut).

PS: The Corporate taxes paid are roughly equal to military expenditures….the gas tax and tolls easily covers the costs of road maintenance….our county property taxes cover the school’s bloated budgets…..fines, tickets, fees and renewals easily cover our police and courts so don’t feed me the BS that my money is taken and used for my benefit–it is REDISTRIBUTION.

Freed Debt Slave
Freed Debt Slave
  javelin
January 1, 2017 10:58 am

This ^^ is why in 2012, I sold my businesses, rental properties, and various other interests, paid off all debt and decided to go on a producers strike. I realized that I was paying for Obama’s family vacations, more drones at different departments of oppression, new cars and armaments for the deep state (and local cops) to crush more of my freedoms, and I had enough.
I have dialed down my productiveness to the bare minimum. Remember, the IRS can come after you for hiding money you earned, however there is nothing they can do if you just get up one morning and decide that you have indeed had enough, and choose to just walk out of the game. The only thing preventing you from doing this at that point is your debt masters. Get them out of your life, and you are like a slave that just got released from your chains, and can walk off the plantation.
I have no problem paying in to a system that represents me, and fellow American citizens through the law of this land – the US Constitution, however, like the patriots that dumped tea over the bow so many years ago, I too decided it was time to dump my productivity “over the bow” until I was given that thank you card in the way of being told that you are now again a voice. No voice, no productivity assholes…..period.

starfcker
starfcker
December 31, 2016 6:09 pm

Great column, Robert. Your contribution here has been greatly appreciated. Happy new year.

Suzanna
Suzanna
December 31, 2016 6:26 pm

Robert,
You have outdone yourself. Your essay spoke to my heart, and
my mind. Any anger or distress I harbor stems from this topic.
It is enraging that bureaucratic assholes just keep on keeping
on. Your called it exploiting trends and cited “goo.”

“Regardless of whether its citizens can fund themselves, the government always finds a way to fund itself.”

You could have been finished with that last statement. But, you gave more.
No murder or vile act is too low for those that do evil for profit. Thank you
for reminding us. And thank you for the good wishes for our new year.

Suzanna

Maggie
Maggie
December 31, 2016 7:40 pm

YOU WRITE REAL GOOD.

Not Sure
Not Sure
December 31, 2016 8:39 pm

Shout out to the producers of the articles and the posts! Just started following TBP a few months ago and have come to look forward to the posts after the articles, mind you, the articles are great, but what I truly appreciate are all the varied opinions that are expressed, helping me to look at the article from many angles. To close, thanks to all that make up TBP and a blessed New Year all!

Walt
Walt
December 31, 2016 11:03 pm

We should always remain cognizant of the fact that War is a Racket, and these days All Wars are Banker’s Wars.

https://ratical.org/ratville/CAH/warisaracket.pdf
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/allwarsarebankerswars.pdf

As an aside, the two greatest threats to human existence ever conceived by man, arguably both ’causes greater than ourselves’ are Government and Islam.
Specifically:
Death by Government: 395 000 000. (133,147,000 murdered pre-twentieth century; 262,000,000 murdered 1900 – 1999. These numbers are of course approximate and shockingly, do not include battlefield deaths.).
https://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/NOTE1.HTM
Death by Islam: 270 000 000.
https://www.politicalislam.com/tears-of-jihad/

Frighteningly, both Islam and Government are currently manifest in the personage of one Barack “Barry” Hussein Soerto-Obama, a ‘lame duck President’ and a man of dubious and unverified provenance. Damn, we’re on thin ice right now. Hopefully, in three weeks the world will be on firmer ground. Hopefully.

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Oh, and Happy New Year All! Let’s all pray we survive to enjoy it..

SSS
SSS
December 31, 2016 11:53 pm

Good post, Robert.

“It is SLL’s New Year’s wish that you freely choose the causes you deem worthy of your time, energy, and money, and spend not one second more than you’re compelled to on causes less than yourself.”
—-Robert Gore

My wife and I choose to spend time and money on the Assistance League of (your city or town). It is the best charity around and has chapters, all autonomous, throughout America. 100% unpaid volunteer staff, 0% paid workers. Zero!!!!

Like many other charities, it makes money through donations to a thrift shop. The one here in Tucson is better than Nordstrom’s Rack as far as clothes donations with furniture, appliances, tools, dishware, etc thrown in for good measure. 84% of revenues goes straight to its charitable programs, the rest to overhead (utilities, insurance, maintenance). The donors of really good stuff are always from the well to do, always, as it should be.

That’s bang for your buck. And you are always helping people right where you live. Look it up. Assistance League. Then do it.

Wishing you all a HNY. Glad to see that Jim hit his 100% goal for keeping TBP running. He deserves it.

Maggie
Maggie
January 1, 2017 8:06 am

Robert, I am so glad you got my humorous New Year’s Eve punny. I am also glad you joined the team.

You really do write very well.

You understand what so many writers struggle to understand, I believe. Very good writing like yours requires what so very few possess: very good ears. And thanks to Donald Trump being our very soon “next” president (although my husband, from whom you almost NEVER hear because he thinks we are all insane for plopping our names on the lists our government is compiling of people who read too much and have too much intelligence left to be considered trustworthy anymore. So, since he’s so worried about it, he reads here too and from time to time, I know that because he will say “your canine pal replied to you.”) I am crazy about my Nick. And I kinda think he likes me.

Anyway, that guy told me he really believes Trump intends to set the country on a path his first term and then hand the mantle to Pence, in a grand gesture of Anti-Establishment UP YOURS after he’s gotten rid of the incestuous pool of deviants in the Halls of Congress. And, whether they are having too many pizzas for lunch or simply stealing enormous amounts of taxpayer blood in the form of kickbacks and bribes from wealthy donors who make their money by prostituting children and getting pictures of half of the elected officials and their bureaucratic agency heads and probably half of the federal courts and don’t even mention the disgusting perverts in the military who return with Tats of Scorpions for the number of times they’ve been “stung” in the Philippines. And if you DO NOT know, then ask a marine who was there for any length of time, stung or not.

If anyone wonders why I ramble off so much, I actually do it on purpose. My thesis chair from longagofaraway taught me the most important thing about writing to inform and persuade.

DON’T WASTE WORDS. Make every word choice carefully to be sure it conveys as much meaning and detail and nuance in its context and relation to other words as possible. Act as if you only have one page of paper to tell someone how to save your beloved’s life. Make every word earn its place.

Thus, Mark Twain’s “The difference between the right word and almost the right word can be seen by the difference in lightning and a lightning bug.”

Since Twain wrote in an era where writers were paid by the word, his folksy sayings, when published, meant his family might have dinner out. Though very popular in his day and community, Clemons was not wealthy… no big movie contracts for Tom Sawyer for him! So I have taken the liberty of modifying his quote in a way that I believe adds to it without detracting from the Samuel Langhorn Clemons genius.

Maggie’s version of the Master’s saying…
“The difference between the right word and almost the right word can be ILLUMINATED by the difference in lightning and a lightning bug.”

Illuminated instead of seen. I think it is more enlightening.

But, in search of grand and glorious causes less than myself, word rambling is one of my favorites.

Happy New Year Robert.

And to show I will edit my stuff to DEATH looking for ways to pare words while adding meaning, I scanned my comment and realized that there were too many thats in there. Always question every single that.

I said, above that “…that guy told me he really believes that Trump…” (Use ellipses to get rid of as many words as possible in quoted matter) which has now become “that guy told me he really believes Trump.” I think the word “that” is always suspect.

Robert, FWIW, I rarely feel the urge suspect”that” suspiciously when you talk on the screen.

Maggie
Maggie
  Robert Gore
January 1, 2017 9:43 am

Just checking something.

Suzanna
Suzanna
  Maggie
January 1, 2017 12:01 pm

you will have me watching my “thats”
that’s for sure!
Happy New Year Maggie, (and Nick)
and perhaps (your clime allows it) when your big beasts go to
dog heaven, you will consider a Doberman dog. They are velcro
dogs, and noisy with visitors, but very full of love and loyalty.
I say get em’ young and get a pair. Male and female, and neuter/spay
before you get pups…unless you want pups.

Suzanna

Maggie
Maggie
  Suzanna
January 1, 2017 1:41 pm

Thanks, Suzanna. I told my son I plan to have taxidermist stuff Jake if and when he goes. After his initial horror, he and I discussed it, concluding Jacob’s stuffed carcass would in no way resemble our beloved polar bear scatter rug.

But, oh, will I miss the beastie. I’m amazed at my hope to see my son graduate with a good career and explore parts unknown to modern man. Or at least some things he’d like to do. These goals would take him away from us for months or, even, years.

But, if I do not hear this dog at the door every hour or so, wanting to know if he can come protect me inside the house, I begin to worry whether he finally realized the fence is barely taller than he and the coyote pack we see approaching the bunny hutches at night out our bedroom window in moonlight just might convince the big guy to make the leap.

Then I worry about him getting hurt. I bring him in and brush him and take care of him. My son says I have turned his ferociously loyal and loving therapy dog (he was in training when Poppa was with us 4 years ago) into a big lapdog who sleeps too much and needs to go for longer walks. I realized that maybe I’d done that to him when he was younger. And I said so and apologized.

So, we agreed I would not have a taxidermist stuff our Jake after he dies, however many years it is from now (Just turned 6. Good health, but we are trimming some weight from his hip-impaired frame.) As we walked into the back yard, I petted the dog and said “Okay Jake, you get to keep your skin. And, I guess I won’t have a Jacob’s Coat of One Color, either.”

My son turned around and hollered at me. “MOM. Dammit, would you please stop saying things like that! Who thinks like that?”

I told him chill, I was joking. Then I said, “Cruella De’Ville would have loved this fur though. Especially in winter.”

And my son said “Well, I am going to talk to Dad and make sure it never happens.”

Turns out the brat is a tattletale, too. I hope to finish my “Why I will never turn the dogs into hearth rugs” essay by mid-January.

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hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
January 1, 2017 11:19 am

Robert, I don’t often comment because you are so succinct there’s not a lot for me to add unless I see some minor point, but this one was especially well delivered. It took me a very long time and numerous immersions with in-group/identitarian life, from military to fraternal, political and religious to realize that while humans feel a great comfort and security in being part of the herd, it is a prison of our own making.

I don’t think that more than a small fraction of humanity are capable of escaping its pull, but those always seem to be the ones who achieve the greatest accomplishments and make the rest of us look good.

I do wonder how much of it is simply inescapable- humans are meant to wage war the way flocks of birds are meant to migrate. It’s both an imperative and a mechanism to thin out the herd.

Awesome comments by Maggie and Freed Debt Slave.

Maggie
Maggie
  Robert Gore
January 1, 2017 11:43 am

Shit… don’t force me to research this Prechter dude.

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
January 1, 2017 12:44 pm

Well done : I can honestly state than in my life time at 62 nearly all military ventures pushed by my government was pure unadulterated bull shit and sadly those convinced of the old mom and apple pie line or to preserve against those who threaten our “democracy” ! More bullshit we are not a democracy , if we were Hillary would be president elect and marching us into another conflict like a good national socialist does at every opportunity ! Thank God we are a Democratic Republic of Independent States ! We are all just being fucked over by a financial olagarchy that operates from Wall Street to K-Street to Capitol Street ! Any combat situation these assholes wish to involve our nation in make sure their sons and daughters are the first on the ground with a weapon in their hand and not some poor shmuck that has been brain washed to enrich others that convince him or her they are heros . To what measure is true heroism ? My self and family have paid and lost enough to know it is not worth our sacrifice for somebodies stock portfolio to jump in a rigged market while we lose limbs or life in a merry go round of foolish endevours !