Thursday, August 29, 2013

"Do you believe a stranger will do the right thing?"

"The decline of serial killers and rise of the sharing economy. The booming market for peer-to-peer business is a reflection of Americans' renewed faith in strangers."
In San Francisco and Los Angeles, fleets of amateur taxi drivers have taken to the streets, using services like Lyft and Sidecar to find fares, ferrying total strangers around to earn extra cash. In New York City, despite legal concerns, there are thousands of apartments available on Airbnb, and many renters allow a never ending stream of visitors to book a spare bedroom for a few nights each week. Across the nation, TaskRabbits fill odd jobs — walking the dogs, carrying the groceries, and cleaning the bathrooms of people they don’t know very well at all. 
Collectively these companies have raised over $200 million in funding to power what's known as the "sharing economy." But there was time not so long ago when the idea of interacting so freely with complete strangers would have made many Americans much more uncomfortable. "There was a cultural moment during the '70s and '80s where the dominant boogieman was the serial killer. This figure crystallized our worst fears, and walked among us," says Harold Schecter, a professor at Queens College and a true-crime writer.
The article goes on to say that the trend in serial killings peaked in the 80's and has gone steadily down since then. Which I suppose is another way of saying "the booming market for peer-to-peer could/should boom larger, now that people don't have to be as afraid of strangers. Which begs the question... If the scourge that was serial killing is no longer the specter preventing this flourishing world of tomorrow, here today, thanks to the internet, how come this rent-a-rigmarole has not quite taken over the economy? *

To help me answer that attempt at asking a question, in a flash of sheer perspicacity, I goggled guru 'David Brooks shared economy'. The search lead me indirectly to him by way of a derisively critical Media-ite post of Tom Friedman's take on this "per-to-peer market".
All this paradigm needs is a catchy name, which Friedman, like his paper-mate David Brooks, specializes in. Behold the “sharing economy”:
In a world where, as I’ve argued, average is over — the skills required for any good job keep rising — a lot of people who might not be able to acquire those skills can still earn a good living now by building their own branded reputations, whether it is to rent their kids’ rooms, their cars or their power tools. “There are 80 million power drills in America that are used an average of 13 minutes,” says Chesky. “Does everyone really need their own drill?”
Chesky (not a serial killer) is the founder of Airbnb, whom the Media-ite Post treats with a skeptical lens.
Airbnb’s story, at least as Friedman tells it, is tailor-made for the proto-Times columnist, always discerning moral patterns in the miasma of capitalism. Friedman piously repeats Airbnb founder Brian Chesky’s tale of conjuring his company while trying to scrape up rent in San Francisco, after years of failing to find a steady job with health insurance. Chesky used his ingenuity—read here as a house that he couldn’t afford but could rent out—to build a company, and presto, he got his health insurance, just as his parents wanted. An inspiring narrative, at least if you’re not skeptical of it, which you should always be when a company’s CEO describes the easy raveling of his own genius.
At this point, I'm wondering do I have to take a side? does it matter? and if it does, is it going to help me close this post, before I get lost, looking for serial killers... For what is worth, its apparent to me that the arguments for and against "the sharing economy", as presented in some publications, stem from a more general debate of capitalism vs shades of communism.
Which as I understand it, is not fitting of the Amazon portal to your right --->
What?... (double take)
Yes, the one I'm in the position of asking readers to use from time to time. That one!
Thanks to those who have used it, and to those who have yet to use it too.

The Verge, Media-ite, The NYT

* I was tempted to say by storm, but that would put me over my self imposed limit of wanton use of metaphors.

bagoh20 said...
If you stop and think about it, you will be amazed by how much of your life is consumed dealing with the simple fact that you can't trust people.

Locking and unlocking everything you touch: your phone, computer, desk, your house, your car. Hiding things like guns, your wallet, food in your refrigerator. Everybody has to pay for and maintain fences, walls, security systems and alarms. You need endless passwords, pin numbers, and elaborate secret handshakes. You have to deal with police, banks, lawyers, accountants, and others primarily to protect your stuff. You need contracts, and receipts, giant stuffed money belts, mob enforcers, and body guards. You have to worry about someone stealing your money, your information, your dirty underwear, your virginity, your wife, your kids, your dog, and even your very identity.

If people were all trustworthy, the economy would either flourish or grind to a halt depending on who you are.

I'm 100% trust worthy, except I will sneak a look at your ass when you turn your back, but you were hoping I would anyway.

56 comments:

The Dude said...

That post raises the question about when begging will ever be used correctly.

Or does it?

That is waiting heavily on my mind.

edutcher said...

"Ah have always relied on the kindness of strangers".

And we know what happened to Blanche DuBois.

The Dude said...

She married Meade?

KCFleming said...

The sharing economy is a consequence of the Obama part-time economy.

Obama has spurred the black and grey markets. Read: 'tax avoidance.'

The risk in working with strangers is less than the legitimate market price.

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

We are becoming a fat Cuba.

Palladian said...

I think that the rise of the internet and www caused the decline in serial killers.

KCFleming said...

"...the rise of the internet and www caused the decline in serial killers."

Interesting thought, Palladian.
Needs details!

ndspinelli said...

Sixty, LOL x 5!

rhhardin said...

Wm. Kerrigan

Every period has its timidities. Do I dare read Ovid? Do I dare disbelieve in immortality? The threat of nuclear warfare may indeed spread anxiety; yet people have always dreaded an eschaton, a violent end to time. Still, after all the qualifications, there does seem to be an alarming cultivation of anxiety in our day. It seems part and parcel of this new open-ended proliferation of anxiety that we cannot pin down the reasons, which themselves proliferate like the spawning images in a state of panic. We might be inclined to connect our modern anxiety with the bustling chaos of urban life, as opposed to farming communities, where anxiety is annual, expected, ritualized. We might argue that a medieval worldview, with its clear distinctions, its sure sense of boundaries, managed anxiety better than the relativisms of the early modern and modern periods, with their two-edged gift of infinite human possibilities. With many qualifications, we must make such distinctions stick. But whatever the causes, anxiety is on us like a plague these days. Not long ago thrillers and murder mysteries were mostly about criminals with distinct motives. Now they feature the serial killer. Unlike the murderer who killed, fulfilled his purpose, and hoped to remain innocuous, the inexorable serial killer with his open-ended string of crimes hopes to become famous as a source of anxiety. News broadcasts, themselves great organizers of anxiety, regularly contain health segments in which the public is invited to become anxious about what it eats, what it buys, how it seeks pleasure. One set of experts steps forth to inculcate anxiety, another to teach us how to live with it. What do those in the know actually know? They always claim to know where our true concerns should lie...

...This new space, ``social anxiety,'' seems to be an extensive one. There's no housing shortage when it comes to social anxiety. Today we have environmental anxiety (the main subsets being clean air, clean water, clean sunlight); food anxiety; trash anxiety; hatred anxiety; dirt anxiety; dating anxiety; consumer anxiety; parenting anxiety (some of the subsets being toy, spanking, lessons, college, and money anxiety); academic anxiety; television anxiety; political anxiety (subsets too numerous to mention); fashion anxiety; hair anxiety; wealth anxiety; job anxiety; speech anxiety; endangered species anxiety; crime anxiety; medical anxiety; alcohol anxiety; smoking anxiety; and so on through every compartment of modern existence...''

== Wm. Kerrigan, ``Death and Anxiety,'' _Raritan_ XVI:3 Winter 1997 p.74

Eric the Fruit Bat said...

Aren't there guys in India who wander the streets cleaning people's ears for few pennies?

HOORAY FOR THE FUTURE!!!

USA!!! USA!!! USA!!! USA!!!

rhhardin said...

Most of Kerrigan's 15 year old anxieties have become narratives, and then doubted as narratives owing to the link with the MSM.

Blogs.

Eric the Fruit Bat said...

"I want to live as far away from my neighbors as I can possibly afford."

-- Some Guy I Used to Work With

Evi L. Bloggerlady said...

Sixty, you crack me up.

Evi L. Bloggerlady said...

Lem, These guys did the right thing in New Jersey...

KCFleming said...

Great quote, rhhardin.

bagoh20 said...

Trust strangers? I don't even trust people I know well. Out of necessity I have to trust all the time, but it is a never ending disappointment.

Maybe Palladian is on to something with serial killers. If you have such a puruloid obsession today, you can find video and photos easily online to feed your need for the disgusting and violent. Like all of us, the serial killer is living a virtual life of interaction. Physical contact is so 1980's

KCFleming said...

"Do you believe a stranger will do the right thing?""

Well, not if he's Mookie.

Then he's gonna throw a trash can through your window.

bagoh20 said...

If you stop and think about it, you will be amazed by how much of your life is consumed dealing with the simple fact that you can't trust people.

Locking and unlocking everything you touch: your phone, computer, desk, your house, your car. Hiding things like guns, your wallet, food in your refrigerator. Everybody has to pay for and maintain fences, walls, security systems and alarms. You need endless passwords, pin numbers, and elaborate secret handshakes. You have to deal with police, banks, lawyers, accountants, and others primarily to protect your stuff. You need contracts, and receipts, giant stuffed money belts, mob enforcers, and body guards. You have to worry about someone stealing your money, your information, your dirty underwear, your virginity, your wife, your kids, your dog, and even your very identity.

If people were all trustworthy, the economy would either flourish or grind to a halt depending on who you are.

I'm 100% trust worthy, except I will sneak a look at your ass when you turn your back, but you were hoping I would anyway.

The Dude said...

Didn't you mean "personal identity PIN number"?

KCFleming said...

"If people were all trustworthy, the economy would either flourish or grind to a halt depending on who you are."

That fact sparked the rise of capitalism. If you cannot trust the merchant, you do not buy. The increasingly reviled Judeo-Christian ethic helped this along.

Michael Novak:
"The only long-lasting foundation for a capitalist society is a moral, spiritual, and religious one.

...The reason behind these checks and balances is a classical Christian and Jewish observation: Every human sometimes sins. From this fact is drawn a political principle: Trust no one with excessive power. Trust no institution, either.

...Certain kinds of moral ethos are incompatible with capitalist practice; other kinds favor it. Several different types of cultures favor capitalist success: Protestant, Confucian, Jewish, Northern European Catholic. All of these have in common a certain rigor and austerity, an almost Stoic sense of sobriety and responsibility, and a certain disdain for corruption. In such cultures capitalism grows speedily. By contrast, cultures in which the state controls everything seem to breed habits of bribery, favoritism, nepotism, and rule by personal favor rather than rule by law.
"

rcocean said...

Brooks is a big-city easterner. I grew up various small towns in the 60s and 70s. People didn't lock their doors (car or house) and regularly trusted "strangers" with all kinds of things. The trust has always been there.

Maybe not in NYC though. And as usual, Brooks skips over the significant Demographic/Economic changes in NYC and LA over the last 30 years.

I know for a fact that you can be a lot more trusting when your neighbors live in expensive homes and belong to certain ethnic groups (yes, I wrote the truth).

bagoh20 said...

I just finish remodeling, and threw out most of everything in my home, furniture, every single book, electronics, clothes and appliances. I want a minimal amount of stuff laying around from now on.

I simply put it outside in front of my house, with a single sign that said "Free". Everything was gone within a day. The hundred or so books all went withing the first hour. People were competing, racing home to get trucks to load stuff up before someone else got my junk. It feels good to know my mess is now someone elses far away. Suckers!

I don't own a single physical book now. I can always still read them. It's just that someone else has to hold them.

edutcher said...

Evi L. Bloggerlady said...

Lem, These guys did the right thing in New Jersey...

You need to stop by here more often...

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

Nice catch Ed.

rcocean said...

I'm baking a pie right now. A great big pie. Apple pie.

rcocean said...

Was thinking of blue-berry but decided to go with apple.

Dumb Plumber said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Dust Bunny Queen said...

dang it. Accidentally posed that on my husband's account and now I can't seem to change it.

Grrrr.

bagoh20 said...

Pies get stolen all the time. Someone should invent a pie lock.

The Dude said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
The Dude said...

DBQ - copy, delete comment, paste as DBQ. Problem solved.

rhhardin said...

delete comment from the old account, perhaps is the hangup

Dumb Plumber said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Dust Bunny Queen said...

(aha....fixed....not that I don't want you to look at his blog, but it is confusing to have so many accounts :-(

What rcocean said.

It is a demographic thing. In a small town or a "nice" neighborhood full of law abiding people who respect themselves and respect their neighbors there is much more trust and a relaxed lifestyle. IF I were living in NYC or another big urban area, I wouldn't trust other people much either. I still wouldn't trust a total stranger even now, here in redneck country.

That doesn't mean that we don't take precautions or act sensibly when you run into people that you do not know or YES...judge people by their appearance.

For instance. We have 6 vehicles on the property and two commercial trucks, one with a hydraulic boom and the other a service vehicle loaded with tools, parts and equipment. Usually all of the vehicles have the keys in the ignition and are not locked. Sometimes we might bring the keys into the shop at night, which we DO lock. Our doors are unlocked all day long when we are at home.

BUT....we also keep loaded weapons at an easy reach. We do NOT let strangers into the house or shop buildings. We are thinking of getting a better gate for the driveway and locking it at night, but probably won't.....too much work to lock and unlock

bagoh20 said...

A couple of times I absent mindedly left my front door wide open and gone to work all day. Nothing was ever taken. While locked, the house has been broken into twice in 18 years here. Also nothing ever stolen. Once kids just broke in ate the food, and hung out for a while with my dog. The other time the teenagers were caught mid-burglary by the neighbors and police.

deborah said...

Has serial killing actually dropped in incidence, or have they become more educated by police procedural programs?

ndspinelli said...

Brooks actually grew up in St. Louis Park, Mn. That's a Jewish suburb of the Twin Cities, where The Coen Brothers grew up.

ndspinelli said...

What a minute, that is Thomas Friedman, they all look alike, just ask ricpic. Franken grew up there also.

Methadras said...

The Hollywood style serial killers don't exist anymore if they ever did at all. Why? Well being a serial killer takes a shit ton of work and planning.

The Dude said...

I killed a bowl of Wheaties once.

deborah said...

"Well being a serial killer takes a shit ton of work and planning."

Somehow I doubt that. I'm interested in Nick's opinion.

ricpic said...

I disagree with the premise 100%. This country had a much higher trust quotient in the past. Books could be and have been written about the decline in trust. I put it down to the continual rain of hammer blows against the shared or common culture since the '60's. Another theory is that the loss of trust began with the pushup bra.

rcocean said...

Where Brooks grew up:

"Brooks, who is Jewish,[4][5] was born in Toronto, Canada – his father was a US citizen living in Canada at the time – and grew up in New York City in Stuyvesant Town. He graduated from Grace Church School in New York City, Radnor High School (located in a Main Line suburb of Philadelphia) in 1979 and from the University of Chicago, with a degree in history, in 1983"

rcocean said...

BTW, DNA evidence, cell phones, security cameras, and the internet and vastly improved communications between Police Departments -have made it tougher to be a serial killer.

sakredkow said...

I think that the rise of the internet and www caused the decline in serial killers.

I'm with Pogo - how does that interesting idea work?

ricpic said...

...they all look alike, just ask ricpic.

If you mean all the Jews have cute button noses that is correct, Sir.

Actually that's a lie. It's the Micks that all have cute button noses. I remember when I was a kid in Brooklyn and there'd be this big 300 pound Irish stevedore (back when there still were stevedores) walking down the street toward me and when he passed by I noticed that he had the cutest little turned up button nose. They all did. Make of that what you will.

Rabel said...

Serial killers and power tools. This rings a bell.

Do you know where that Black & Decker has been?

Anonymous said...

I'm talking about a house cleaning, just to be clear.

Synova said...

My husband is talking about going to Japan for a year after kids are all out of high school and reasonably settled. It's got us both thinking about all of our "stuff".

We did some work on the house two years ago and filled a huge dumpster in our driveway three times, though a lot of that was construction waste. But I realize that we could fill another dumpster or two. We ought to do so. We ought to start getting rid of anything that isn't furniture in use (we've got unused furniture that needs to go) or items we'd put in storage (some antique and art glass, oil portraits of kids, etc.) and just get rid of everything else.

Why wait?

But it's hard because I think part of being human is the impulse to store stuff up for later use. We're naturally hoarders, even when we know better.

And this has to do with the "sharing economy" by saying... if we had only a few valuables it would be easy to secure them in the house. If we got rid of our junk, it wouldn't be that inconceivable to rent a room on a temporary basis and having other people in our house.

Synova said...

Wow, grammar. :P

JAL said...

how come this rent-a-rigmarole has not quite taken over the economy?

You'd be surprised. Really.

Don't know so much about "sharing economy" as much as itty bitty entrepreneurship will find a way.

A lot of it is under the radar.

Kind of Galty.

Joe Biden, America's Putin said...

@ Bagoh "I just finish remodeling, and threw out most of everything in my home, furniture, every single book, electronics, clothes and appliances. I want a minimal amount of stuff laying around from now on.


Minimalism is the way to go.

Trooper York said...


"Minimalism is the way to go"

Ask any Korean dictator. Get rid of the crap you don't need.

Trooper York said...

What?

Too soon?

Joe Biden, America's Putin said...

Trooper - yeah- lil' Commie Kim likes to dispose of people.

That's not the minimalism I was talking about - esp because I doubt lil' commie Kim is himself a minimalist. I suspect he lives in holy bejeweled commie splendor while his subjects eat dirt.

Mitch H. said...

I think that the rise of the internet and www caused the decline in serial killers.

I wonder what the correlation is between the "lead paint generational bulge" and serial killing? You'd think that lead-paint-poisoned types would be more inclined towards spree killing than serial killing, but who knows?

I'm with Pogo - how does that interesting idea work?

Presumably along the same lines as the Instapundit theory about the rise in Internet porn causing a corresponding decline in rape and other violent sex crimes - if the urge is being sated by virtual means, it's easier to do virtual evil than actual, sweaty physical evil.