...
The picture Mander paints has a vast, web-like look andfeel to
it, extending from the vastness of the Canadian Northwest Territories,
into the boardrooms of the major oil conglomerates, the programming
chambers of the television studios, the daily lives of
once-free-roaming, nomadic Indian cultures, governmental "Think
Chambers", the back rooms where the exploitation of the moon and
the possible resources of Mars is being planned, and of course, the
burgeoning internet about which many have scarecly a clue as to its
worst and greatest potentials. And, surprisingly, your
bedroom. Highlighting several points won't get the point of the book
across because on any one of them, the reader of this review could
say, "Well, that one doesn't much bother me." or "Well,
I can't do much about that." or "Gee, that's too bad for
those poor indians, but what could I possibly do to change that? I
have so much going on already.", and the important message of the
book would be completely overlooked. ("Well, what's the
point?" you might be asking. Please forgive me. I swore not to
spoonfeed the answers.)
I strongly suggest that you -do not- read
this book if you are living a comfortable lifestyle, or at least hope
to live one. There's no point in upsetting yourself if you're not
willing to be different in order to make a difference in the future of
the world. We might want to be different, or imagine we would be
different if we were certain it would help things, but what this book
speaks of isn't on the level of 'conspiracy theory', it's about what
is actually happening right now...
Again, it doesn't pin down any
one thing. It pulls in everything starting with the most basic
elements: lack of truth in advertising; exploitation of humans as
consumer addicts; corporations as -real entities-, composed of people,
that share a single-pointed focus on accomplishing a -central aim-
(and not necessarily their stated one) at all costs; and many other
elements that add up to a "web" that we humans have
unwittingly become tangled in. The web tangles those who know about
it, and those who don't know about it equally, but the one's who think
they know about it sometimes imagine that they are better off than
those who don't know about it. So, what does one do? The book
addresses this question.
This reviewer believes that any attempt to
diminish the ideas in the book by associating them with some existing
philosopy such as Neo-Ludditism (broadly : a philosophy of being
opposed to technological change) would be a misdirection. The
underlying motivation behind this book is not to increase paranoia and
resistance for resistance's sake, but to introduce the = reader, to as
full of an extent as possible, to the conditions and circumstances
under which she currently lives and must become aware of if any
lasting change is to be possible.