Culchie Christmas shopping
The 8th December, the day on which Catholics traditionally celebrated the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, the day on which they believe the Blessed Virgin Mary was conceived, was an important holy day for generations in Ireland; not for completely religious reasons.
The closure of the schools for the holy day, particularly in the country areas, provided an opportunity for a day’s Christmas shopping. “The culchie Christmas,” a friend used to call it. Families would travel up to Dublin for the day to see the lights and to buy things that would have been unavailable to them in small rural communities. The tradition continued until recent times, but with the spread of shops and the easier access to cities the day in Dublin became less popular.
Shopping is something that Irish people do rather well. In fact, shopping is something that most western societies continue to do rather well. We have highly developed commodity fetishes. With online shopping, particularly in the weeks and months of lockdown, our desire to spend can find instant gratification.
Demand for consumer satisfaction has skewed scientific progress. Travel technology has hardly moved on since the 1960s. Our ability to go into space has been in a similar state of suspended animation since the days of the Apollo missions. In agriculture, many developing counties are still recovering from the impact of the “Green Revolution” and are endeavouring to recover traditional crops and methods. Many university science faculties would protest at length about serious underfunding.,
Where we have made huge advances is in those areas where there is a market; where there is a profitable market for products. Pharmaceutical companies have prospered, particularly where drugs have offered lucrative returns, as the will with the Covid crisis this year.
But nothing can compare with the information technology revolution, computers, telecommunications, television and music systems, including many devices anyone over thirty would struggle to operate; there are things we could not have imagined thirty years ago. There are times when it seems that the whole of human scientific endeavour has been directed towards attaining the point where spotty youths on trains can sit with their feet on the seats sending pointless videos to friends they saw five minutes previously, or will see in five minutes time.
Scientific research is only possible with funding. The private sector depends on profit so will tend to provide funding where research can be shown to contribute to a growth in income. The situation created, in blunt terms, is that science will produce whatever we will shop for. Extraordinary mobile phones are possible because there are people with money to pay for them, while elementary illnesses persist in Africa because the people cannot afford to pay to end them
Maybe, when western society finally collapses because there is nothing left to sustain it, the reason will not be that our countries had been invaded, or had been swept by some ideological revolution. Maybe the reason will be that all we could do was to go shopping – and buy smartphones. Smartphones that make trips to Dublin, or any other city, unnecessary.
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