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Neither Dow Jones, nor NASDAQ, nor
Mibtel
Just IndVal (Index of Values)
You probably can not have failed to notice
that the title of this article is somewhat animated; nor that I use
a neologism that, I believe, is not to be found anywhere else. I
refer to the term IndVal that is but the abbreviation of Index of
Values. However, before explaining the title and elaborating on
it, I must make several considerations. No one can fail to have
noticed that the mass media and all forms of communication, like
ourselves, are soiled by a vision of life which is certainly
unorthodox. We spend whole days hearing or worrying about the
stock exchanges falling, about how the various financial indexes are
going and all that concerns them. Do not deny that when we hear the
news that, for example, the exchange in New York or the NASDAQ index
have gone down, we also feel a little down ourselves, almost as if
we are connected to them by some direct function. This happens
because, in our cognitive and instinctive system, the concept has
prevailed that the economy and individual serenity (or collective
serenity, if you prefer) go together. For an obvious law of mass
action not even Politics, which is both the victim and the
executioner of this vision, has been able to escape this "infection"
and the pathology is so advanced that there is perhaps the need for
a "transplant". Without elaborating on the term "transplant",
leaving to your imagination what can be intended and done, it is
evident that everything: laws, decrees, provisions, trends, ideals,
and so on, gravitate around the following concept: Social
development = Economic Development. The fundamental issue is
that man, without wanting to cite the vision that the great
religions or philosophies of the world have on this small
individual, is essentially a spiritual being, also when he is down
because the NASDAQ index has fallen. In that moment it is our spirit
("soiled" by today's culture) that feels its expectations and
horizons to be narrower. Indeed, over time, experience teaches
us that it is the spiritual aspect that tends to make us suffer
more. We suffer for a disappointment, for an incomprehension, for a
condition, for a wrong we have endured, even (and much too often)
for being blocked in traffic. We can say that modern civilization
suffers to a large extent because of new spiritual conditions which
were unknown before. Yet all Politics (except rare exceptions)
gravitate around numerical considerations and data: Budgets,
Monetary Indexes, Inflation, etc. We can say that the soul of
Politics is dead; along with the Values which animated it. Laws
and decrees are almost exclusively born out of economic and
financial considerations and if we observe the last decades of
"Civilization" we notice that: poverty has increased in the
world; unemployment has increased; the essential
components of society (family, school, State.); are disintegrating
young people almost do not manage to have Ideals that animate them
anymore. The economy, swept along by a financial world which
is in the hands of less and less families, is increasingly
unstructured. Etc... At this point I think that it is
worth considering that we should seriously understand that it is man
who makes the economy and not vice versa (man is not made for
Saturday but Saturday is made for man). We must imagine that the
target of Politics is completely wrong; it cannot be the economy but
man. I intend to say that a good state will be formed when I
will be concerned about improving the following Indexes: The
index of a serene childhood; The index of the Family;
The index of educated and trained youths; The index of
satisfied and correctly remunerated workers; The index of
unmarginalized Elderly people. Etc... I have the vague
feeling that Exchanges of this type do not exist and that none of
these Stocks are listed either in Politics or in Society. No
Minister or Economist worries about such indexes, perhaps because
the Fathers of Politics and the Economy are no longer among us but
behind the Great enemy of this century: the world of Finance
Today I want to launch this new "fashion": the IndVal, the index of
Values; I want Bourses of Values to be born and perhaps this
"fashion" will clothe man anew.
Guido Bissanti
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