Tuesday, March 1, 2022

Survival Guide to Everyday Living

There is a book I’d love to write but probably won’t. In reality, I don’t have the time, patience, or willingness to put it ahead of my other writing commitments. Unfortunately, I think it’s a book that many people need to read because it could be so relevant in today’s social, business and economic climate.



The idea behind the book came from my recent readings about the economic, political, and social upheavals that occurred in the past and are still going on today, not only in this country but worldwide.

The intertwinement and entanglements of business and political interests has been going on since the late sixties and early seventies. It’s an open secret that lobbyists weld an enormous power in Washington for the vested good of special interests and the moneyed elite. Generally speaking, it’s the middle class who gets the short end of the dollar stick in most of these transactions, arrangements and agreements made into law.


Even Norman Lear’s autobiography ‘This Too I Get to Experience’ touched on the same subject matter……short-sighted vision instead of long term perspective. Lear talks about a conversation he had with a Harvard professor who lamented ‘the most rapacious societal disease of our time: short-term thinking’.

The professor explained: “There will be a time very shortly when young people-very young people- will be looking into computer screens. They will be looking directly into screens, not to the side, so there will be no peripheral vision; they won’t be looking over the top, so they won’t see what’s ahead; they’ll be staring straight ahead into those screens, blind to everything ahead and around them.”


Money managers and financial product traders will be selling, buying, and swapping financial products around the world. With that narrow focus, like a horse with blinders, they will have more control and hold more power in those split seconds than we can today imagine. And all of it entirely focused on short-term gains.”


Back in 2008, the near collapse of our world-wide financial system, and Wall Street in particular, should have been a wakeup call for all Americans to pay more attention to their wallets and events happening around them. Unfortunately, not much seems to have changed over the ensuing years. Every day there are new financially-coated products, events, angles, schemes, and ‘can’t lose’ facades presented to the general public.


To that end, financial literacy and media literacy are two topics of interest that every American should acquaint themselves with. One of the best descriptions of financial literacy came from an internet site of the World Bank.

It reads as follows:

‘What is financial literacy all about, you may ask? Essentially, it is the ability to use one’s knowledge and skills to effectively manage financial resources, ideally for a lifetime of financial well-being. Indeed, financial literacy is something we all have to work on each day—it’s part of our ongoing education.


Despite being a relatively new field of study, financial literacy has become increasingly important for governments and citizens – without it there can be broad implications for the economic health and stability of countries.


Here in Russia, the authorities are highly cognizant of this and thus partnered with the World Bank in 2011 to start implementation a project on financial literacy and education. Promoting responsible and rational financial behavior is one of the main goals of the project, along with establishing financial education infrastructure at federal and regional levels, increasing the accountability of financial services providers, designing a national strategy, raising awareness and strengthening institutional capacity and underlying business practices between consumers and financial services providers.



This project focuses primarily on improving the financial literacy of school-age children and college student. The idea being that they gain the modern required financial knowledge and awareness of financial instruments, which then they can bring home to their families, including seniors, and to the wider community.


Thanks to the project, financial literacy courses have been introduced in schools and universities, with training provided to teachers and tutors across the education system. By June 2018, over 20,000 university students and teachers from almost two-thirds of Russia’s regions had completed training courses in financial literacy offered by the project.


Organized with support from the project, the National Savings Week for Adults and the National Week of Financial Literacy for Children and Youth have gained significant traction in 2018 – the latter engaging over 2.5 million children and teenagers who participated in around 25,400 events across Russia.


To support these goals, Russia’s Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank approved in 2017 the National Strategy for Financial Literacy for 2017-2023, and launched its Implementation Road Map.’  *



Media literacy, on the other hand, is using common sense instead of letting some so-called journalist do it for you. A good definition can be found at Medialit.org.


It reads as follows:

What is important to understand is that media literacy is not about "protecting" kids from unwanted messages. Although some groups urge families to just turn the TV off, the fact is, media are so ingrained in our cultural milieu that even if you turn off the set, you still cannot escape today's media culture. Media no longer just influence our culture. They ARE our culture.

Media literacy, therefore, is about helping students become competent, critical, and literate in all media forms so that they control the interpretation of what they see or hear rather than letting the interpretation control them.

To become media literate is not to memorize facts or statistics about the media, but rather to learn to raise the right questions about what you are watching, reading, or listening to. Len Masterman, the acclaimed author of Teaching the Media, calls it "critical autonomy" or the ability to think for oneself.

Without this fundamental ability, an individual cannot have full dignity as a human person or exercise citizenship in a democratic society where to be a citizen is to both understand and contribute to the debates of the time.

from Literacy in a Media Age: An Overview and Orientation Guide to Media LIteracy Education

It simply comes down to that old, worn, yet so true cliché: Let the buyer beware. We all have the responsibility to listen and learn for ourselves instead of letting someone else do it for us. To use common sense instead of group-think and to forge our own path to enlightenment instead of following the crowd.


I recently touched on a similar subject matter in a blog entitled: ‘Don’t Touch my Avatar’. Today’s financial and media worlds are full of tall tales of quick riches and absolutes in the area of truth. We have to dig through the everyday floss and moss to find the reality behind many of those facades masquerading as the truth.

·       *Definition of financial literacy – World Bank web site

·       *Medialit.org



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