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Cash does not rule everything around us. At best, money is a simplified tally or or proxy for control, while power rests on perceptions of legitimacy and collective assent or consent. The trillion-dollar valuation of SpaceX this week intensifies larger questions about relationships between individuals and communities. Elon Musk has amassed immense financial wealth. He remains one person. No individual creates, maintains, or controls society. Power is always social. The removal of Donald Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center underscores how quickly authority built on perception can collapse, revealing underlying tensions beneath. US Semiquincentennial celebrations speed toward unavoidable contradictions and confrontations rather than consensus, Deeper struggle is not just between powerful individuals, but between individual ambition and collective opinion and will. These tensions appeared everywhere this week in Cultural Meaning-Making sporting events such as the World Cup, where countries like Congo and Haiti reminded a global audience directly of Movement and Memory grounded in liberation and resistance narratives. The heavily subsidized Musk’s seizure of curated public imagination also intensified debates over the role and responsibility of regulatory Social Structures as well as the limits of the nation-state. Trump’s increasingly unstable vanity projects expose rising opposition at the intersection of sports, celebrity and finance. And even the entertainment group Wu-Tang Clan’s appearance at New York’s Madison Square Garden was a reminder that meaning cannot be reduced to market value, polling data, or stock prices. Spirit, memory, and collective identity, Ways of Knowing that undergird Governance logic, continue to matter. The lesson are both simple and enduring: Reality is far too large to be contained in the imagination of a small group. The worlds we inhabit are ones we make, together. Capital may concentrate, institutions may rise and falter, and powerful figures may temporarily dominate headlines, but no single actor or small group of actors stands above communities that ultimately grant—or withdraw—their consent.
Are you a member of Knarrative? If not, we invite you to join our community today by signing up at: https://www.knarrative.com. As a Knarrative subscriber, you'll gain immediate access to Knubia, our growing community of teachers, learners, thinkers, doers, artists, and creators. Together, we're making a generational commitment to our collective interests, work, and responsibilities.
Join us at https://www.knarrative.com and download the Knubia app through your app store or by visiting https://community.knarrative.com.
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By Knarrative4.9
952952 ratings
Cash does not rule everything around us. At best, money is a simplified tally or or proxy for control, while power rests on perceptions of legitimacy and collective assent or consent. The trillion-dollar valuation of SpaceX this week intensifies larger questions about relationships between individuals and communities. Elon Musk has amassed immense financial wealth. He remains one person. No individual creates, maintains, or controls society. Power is always social. The removal of Donald Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center underscores how quickly authority built on perception can collapse, revealing underlying tensions beneath. US Semiquincentennial celebrations speed toward unavoidable contradictions and confrontations rather than consensus, Deeper struggle is not just between powerful individuals, but between individual ambition and collective opinion and will. These tensions appeared everywhere this week in Cultural Meaning-Making sporting events such as the World Cup, where countries like Congo and Haiti reminded a global audience directly of Movement and Memory grounded in liberation and resistance narratives. The heavily subsidized Musk’s seizure of curated public imagination also intensified debates over the role and responsibility of regulatory Social Structures as well as the limits of the nation-state. Trump’s increasingly unstable vanity projects expose rising opposition at the intersection of sports, celebrity and finance. And even the entertainment group Wu-Tang Clan’s appearance at New York’s Madison Square Garden was a reminder that meaning cannot be reduced to market value, polling data, or stock prices. Spirit, memory, and collective identity, Ways of Knowing that undergird Governance logic, continue to matter. The lesson are both simple and enduring: Reality is far too large to be contained in the imagination of a small group. The worlds we inhabit are ones we make, together. Capital may concentrate, institutions may rise and falter, and powerful figures may temporarily dominate headlines, but no single actor or small group of actors stands above communities that ultimately grant—or withdraw—their consent.
Are you a member of Knarrative? If not, we invite you to join our community today by signing up at: https://www.knarrative.com. As a Knarrative subscriber, you'll gain immediate access to Knubia, our growing community of teachers, learners, thinkers, doers, artists, and creators. Together, we're making a generational commitment to our collective interests, work, and responsibilities.
Join us at https://www.knarrative.com and download the Knubia app through your app store or by visiting https://community.knarrative.com.
To shop Go to:TheGlobalMajority
More from us:
Follow on X:
https://x.com/knarrative_
https://x.com/inclasswithcarr
Follow on Instagram
IG / knarrative
IG/ inclasswithcarr
Follow Dr. Carr:
https://www.drgregcarr.com
https://x.com/AfricanaCarr
Follow Karen Hunter:
https://karenhuntershow.com
https://x.com/karenhunter
IG / karenhuntershow
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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