No right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under which, as good citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic, are illusory if the right to vote is undermined.
- US Supreme Court

Friday, September 5, 2008

bitch, bitch, bitch

I keep thinking and thinking about all the things I have seen and heard, and have felt and thought, and to me it comes down to this notion that the reason this is happening is because something has failed and that therefore the way to fix things is to find the fail and fix it.

This election has made me acutely aware that the best arguments for every liberal position I have ever held are weak and riddled with flaws (so that when a conservative throws an argument at me, I cannot rebut - I must go around and attack the conservative's argument, instead of defending my own). How long has that been going on?

I might still believe wholeheartedly in the end goal - I do believe we can and should make a better life for us, the nation and the human race - but damn if I can explain my position without feeling like a fool.

Humanism was supposed to deliver us, and it hasn't - and it isn't.

I grew up on a General Electric's Carousel of Progress mentality. Science was supposed to do all of these marvelous things. Now science looks more like a curse that can't be undone. I don't understand how people can be so bewildered at how anyone could reject "technological progress". Science won't make us immortal and it won't take away evil, but it will explain to us exactly why Tomorrowland never came true and why all those chemicals we introduced into the environment decades ago have created resistance in the bugs they were supposed to kill. And meanwhile our post-Industrial Revolution quality of life is not clearly or demonstrably better than before, no matter how wealthy we are or how many fancy gadgets we have. The wealthy still live well and the poor still don't, and we're scared enough of our own machines that we still have to make them adorable* just like when, as Simon Schama puts it, the Crystal Palace exhibition made these machines seem "friendly"*. People arrange their entire lives around not getting caught in the evening rush traffic and we all watch helplessly as smoke pours out of our cars and our factories and we can't live without these things. So what do we do?

Why, ban smoking, of course.

We scapegoat. Always we pick a single example of what we hate and we punish that thing with extraordinary, mindless venom. It's symbolic but we don't even seem to be able to acknowledge that it is symbolic, or that we are not behaving rationally. We see quite clearly when others are scapegoating, but when we're doing it, why, we're just fighting for what we believe in. (Because banning smoking will really cure all our pollution woes. Oh, and if you just buy the right consumer goods, the environment won't be a problem any more.)

People cannot live without a governing philosophy. One that meets peoples' needs. (No, that really isn't too much to ask.) Our governing philosophy isn't meeting our needs.
_______________________________________
* that was in the 19th century. Meanwhile, I hear Chitty Chitty Bang Bang has been brought back - and appears to be as popular as ever - while World of Warcraft has taken the cute one step further with its adorable little radiated gnome kingdom....

No comments: