Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Elections & Growing Concerns

That was quite an election in the United States.  Some very interesting story telling, which is problematic when the stories that are told, by anyone, don't match up to reality.

It is also very problematic when those stories are told by people with influence.   Money, connections, aggression - these all influence us. 




Donald Trump via Twitter.   Nov 6, 2012

There is an old proverb I was reminded by on election night because of Donald Trump's Tweet: 


"Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt.
Abraham Lincoln
 



However I am glad he didn't remain silent.    He exposed his thinking.  He exposed how much more dangerous he is than a fool.  Historically, the fool is something for our amusement and has little influence. Donald Trump has proven he will use his money, his connections and his dominant voice in to influence and persuade.   And people listen to him.*
 
The desired outcome of this thinking is a belief that we can carry on business as usual.   No need to course correct and work to protect our home, the planet.    
 
This ups the stakes and takes me to another quote:  

"Stupidity and Evil are the same thing if you judge by the consequences."  
Margaret Atwood, Payback

If we in privileged nations continue to encourage business as usual we are committing genocide on a global scale that will be looked upon by future generations as a greater atrocity than any that had come before it simply because we were too attached to our lifestyles to course correct.
 
After spending the week with Rachel Carson, (mother of the modern environmentalist movement) via Mark Hamilton Lytle's lovely biography The Gentle Subversive I am particularly raw when I see such stupidity and persuasion in one package.    It encourages me to do the only thing I can do when I am lost for words & my soul is aching due to the blindness of so many, including myself - I need to learn.   This is the action that is needed at this time and place in history.   
 
Ms Carson knew that, as a matter of fact she linked the act of learning as a moral imperative.  
 
  “Superficiality, intellectual laziness and moral indifference were qualities Rachel condemned.   For her, the waste of one’s intellectual gifts was akin to the “reckless squandering of natural resources”  
Mark Hamilton

She continue throughout her life to try to refine her stories so that they more accurately reflect the realities of life (living systems/human systems).    She writes of the challenge of waking up to pockets of blindness or ignorance (the absence of that which could be learned that could be helpful) in her thinking, that although painful and hard, this led her to write the seminal work Silent Spring.


"The whole world of science has been revolutionized for a decade or so... It was pleasant for me to believe that much of nature was forever beyond the tampering hand of man - he might level the forests and dam the streams, but the clouds and the rain and the wind were God’s"

"These beliefs have almost been part of me for so long as I have thought about such things.  To have them even vaguely threatened was so shocking that, as I have said, I shut my mind, refused to acknowledge what I couldn’t help seeing.  But that does no good and I have now opened my eyes and my mind...  Time someone wrote of Life in the light of the truth as it now appears to us.”   

Rachel Carson

There is a truth in this we must all face if we want to grow up, existentially.    Life is not about our happiness and the more we chase happiness the further we get from doing the work that is actually needed.   Learning about the world and all it's ugliness (and profound beauty, of course) is diametrically opposed to the pursuit of happiness perscribed by so many aphorisims and platitudes.
 
Do not be lulled to  sleep by the superficial pursuit of happiness.  It is a trap.  I implore you to continue and dig deeper into your learning in these times of such import.   Keep reading, choose well, keep thinking.    We, all of us need to learn so that we can understand how stories are created, understand how we create our stories, and tell better stories, because that is how culture is built.   
 
Thank you for joining me here today.
 
 
* Previous to Gentle Subversive, I spent some time reading and thinking about Ayn Rand Nation by Gary Weiss and Pity The Billionaire by Thomas Frank.   I found these books very helpful in framing the story of America and how this election grew to the silly mess it was.   Summarized by Alex Pareene, so succinctly:



11 comments:

  1. I would alter your argument slightly, replacing "happiness" with "greed". Happiness is an unlimited resource - if I have more, it doesn't necessarily mean that you have less. But when it comes to genuine limited resources that fuel the short-sighted cash grab that is going on (world-wide), I couldn't agree more.

    This was the most vacuous and absurd election in my lifetime, no matter how relieved I am at the result. Most issue's were shallowly discussed. Big issues like climate change remained untouched.

    But I am optimistic that the clowns have embarrassed themselves to such a degree that their words no longer have an impact. Whatever comes out of Trump's mouth will forever be disregarded and mocked. This is a good thing. The 19th century views on women and minorities have had their last gasp. Also good.

    It's hard to convince people to educate themselves if they don't want to, but emphasizing learning as a moral and ethical responsibility is likely the only way. My question: how does this occur in the population that can't reconcile learned education with dogmatic belief?

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    1. I agree with your assessment of the replacement of happiness with greed. In the world that most people live in this is how the language translates. Buy something: you're worth it. Consume, you deserve it - and somehow this creates happiness. Of course, we know it is untrue but so many have so few capacities to move beyond that paradigm.

      It is fascinating to me to have watched the emergence of the tea party only after 2008, the uprising anger of not being able to pursuit happiness (as prescribed by the overarching story) and turn it into something that has happened somehow in a vacuum.

      It points to how disabled the inquiry and thinking mechanisms are a large part of the population.

      Mark Sheilds, PBS had a terrific quote about moving forward: "It's not a democratic debt, not a republican debt, it's an American debt & we all have to go through this together"

      Which is so obvious it hurts but unless one is willing to become an adult in the eyes of history, learn about how things came to be, this is impossible to see.

      As for your second point, it is true that it is hard for a man to learn something when his livlihood depends on him not knowing. We can't ask for that, that is one's own process of becoming. (see this article for a great example of how that works http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175590/tomgram%3A_jeremiah_goulka%2C_confessions_of_a_former_republican/)

      What I am asking for is for we, the progressives to learn and arm ourselves. We cannot dismiss the donald or the Objectivists as fools as they clearly have figured out how to mobilize a large part of the population

      The system is broken and if we want a better system it is going to take many of us, thinking, inquiring, caring, talking, disagreeing to figure out how to move. That means understanding the counterventure, and our own wiring. And imploring us all to do that together.

      Thanks for the thoughtful comment. Helpful

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  2. I struggle with Mr. Trump and his irresponsible rhetoric. I have no issue with his right to think and speak in an irresponsible manner, but I challenge him on his judgement in doing so.

    This man is a societal parasite, and he feeds on the publicity showered on him by a lazy, uncritical audience. How do we punish him for his irresponsible behavior? - we take away what he values most, his publicity. An effective response to this man is to turn our backs on him. I am only one individual, but I can refuse to watch his reality show, boycott any products carrying his endorsement and ignore his words. I can also challenge and question the judgement of those who follow his teachings and his side-show reality series.

    I was impressed how the Vice President of Chrysler (Jeep) responded to Trump's lies (of Jeep moving manufacturing to China) by telling him via tweet that he "is full of shit!". I am heartened to see a direct challenge to such irresponsible behavior.

    But Mr. Trump is only one example of the extremists on either side of our current political spectrum using irresponsible rhetoric as a form of communication. When Sarah Palin stated that Obama "will not follow the Constitution" or Julian Bond mentions the Republican Party and swastikas in the same breath, our discourse is not moving forward. These high profile folks are out of my reach, but their followers are not.

    To move forward as a society we must promote critical thinking, and honest, respectful discussions with those whose opinions differ from ours. Too many of my like-minded friends are satisfied to surround themselves with similar thinkers and tut-tut about how awful the people on "the other side" are. This tribalism does nothing to move our society forward. Donald Trump is a problem, but we are ALL responsible for the solution.

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    1. Here Here!

      What is the saying? When everyone is thinking the same no one is thinking.

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    2. Tribalism is, and likely will always be, a factor in the political arena. True, it has gotten worse lately, but isn't it refreshing that extremism is what lost the GOP this election? It was their's to lose, literally, and by pandering to the far right, Romney lost. Citizen's United is a travesty, and yet it didn't affect the outcome in the expected way. There will always be extremism, but I suspect we are in for a period where the pendulum swings back to the centre.

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    3. I hope you are right about the pendulum swing... it might actually look a whole lot more like pushing it back to the centre. (Koch Bros - 60 MILLION dollars - unfathomable)

      The image that comes to mind is that of the old school rope pulls, tug o wars we used to have.

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  4. Mariette,
    Do not be lulled to sleep by the superficial pursuit of happiness. I love this statement. I have long thought that Donald Trump was an idiot. Whatever his political stripes any man that would make it his mission to prove that the president is not American to me has very short-sighted thinking.

    I had a very interesting discussion with a geologist who works in the oilpatch this weekend. I respect his thinking and his "inside" knowledge of the industry. His comment was that global warming is indeed happening and that while it is likely a cycle of the earth (a common refrain from those that work in the industry, and one that may be accurate) he also said our short term thinking and greedy consumption is not helping matters. Someone in the group commented that no one is willing to give up their lifestyle. My comment was that's because our heads our in the sand and there is no incentive to do so if ignorance is your excuse or your crutch. How do you define happiness is an important question to ask and so is having healthy discussion and debate on the issues and listening to all points of view.
    Thanks for sharing your thoughts.

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    1. It's true, we are very inculturated/programed to believe this is the lifestyle we deserve without being able to look at the damage this lifestyle does not only to the planet and other human beings but to our own efficacy powers. There are few people who have the capacities to create and change, develop skills to assess our own and other's thinking without getting trapped in relativism. Most progressives included. I'm not pointing fingers at the other guy, I'm saying us, I'm saying me.

      The Gentle Subversive was a great example of how to be a free range human being and develop the capacities to get there. It has a lot to do with hard dedicated work. Learning as action, as the necessary step, trying to create the provisional model you work with from what life systems offer you, not what culture provides you. And then always refining it.

      But that takes work, endurance, emotional strength and caring. Most of us at the end of the day want to check out until the next day. And that is the struggle.

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  5. This is an interesting blog on the responses from various people in the tea party right. I find the comparison to pre nazi germany very disturbing. From what I have studied the metaphor is not only misguided and does not line up with the facts but dangerous. It is a incitement to perpetuate great harm towards the progressives.

    It is important not to dismiss it but to understand it. Which is why the link I posted a few comments earlier by Jeremiah Goulka is so helpful

    http://33revolutionsperminute.wordpress.com/2012/11/08/the-gop-delusion-how-conservatives-were-mugged-by-reality/

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  6. I love the notion of being a free range human being...I'm going to ponder that for a while.

    I think your blog post is bang on. Yes its greed - on the whole - as a population that has gotten us into this mess. The greed associated with the assumptions underlying economic growth. But its the pursuit of happiness that captures our day to day stories. The individualistic nature of it; the sense of entitlement to my personal pursuit. This doesn't mean we shouldn't take care of ourselves, nor should be feel guilty when we are happy. But I agree that we need to be conscious of how our individual desires contribute to the collective train wreck that we're on. I think we need a much greater willingness to self-sacrifice for the sake of the greater story.

    Thanks for this conversation.

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