Yeah, sure. If there's any thing we do that is more likely to be
wrong than our political predictions I don't know what it might be. If
we ever get the impression that someone is good at prediction it's
usually because we've forgotten or never examined the vast matrix of
failure the occasional success is imbedded in. The best we can do is to
give odds but somehow that 30% chance of rain never seems to mean much
or be of much use when deciding whether to take the boat out today.
That national speed limit was sure to save lives, that drug law was
supposed to make life safer and it must be someone's fault or someone's
failure when it didn't. Just whose fault you say it is, says much about
who you are. Whether it's Obama, the NRA, women, men, the Liberals or
the Tea Party, our predictions and the predictions we choose to believe give us away.
Of
course the purpose of many predictions isn't to predict, but to scare,
to inflame, to mislead, to further a cause and of course to generate
ratings. The public loves being inflamed and scared and to be the first to
know something scary and all to the point where the authority and
veracity of the predictor is ignored. Hell, we passionately adhere to
predictions that have proved wrong for thousands of years, telling
ourselves "any day now" and we find enough to satisfy ourselves in
predictions that "there will be a storm, an earthquake, a war" to keep
the fantasy going.
If anything sums up the human condition I'm not sure
it isn't the story of Chicken Little and when a prediction that a giant
asteroid would kill us all on March 35, 2041 appeared on CNN, the cackling started before many dumb cluckers bothered to notice that no such date is currently possible
or even questioned the authority of the prophet: Marcus575. NASA says
it's a hoax but of course nobody is going to forgive that buzzkill bunch
of liars, and after all they're lying about climate change and that
face on Mars. Like most thwarted predictions it will end in a witch hunt
by angry and ever more intransigent denialists. I predict.
I
will go to heaven - he will go to hell, my enemies will be defeated,
truth will prevail, peace and justice will arrive and Congress will make
sensible gun laws that will make the number of suicidal rampages
vanishingly small and "not one more" innocent will be killed by a
madman. If only we "raise awareness" there will be no more misogynists,
if only we shut down their websites. If only we can identify the
witches, these horrible and horribly eternal animosities will go away in
the pure land to come. No our problems are not diverse products of the
large spectrum of human nature, our culture, our unwillingness to
identify madness in ourselves, there are specific things; large
magazines, specific cartridges, certain materials and there are vague,
hazy and slippery legal solutions that sane people must agree upon even
without being able to define them.
The "world,"
whatever that means, didn't end in 1982 or 2012 or on any of the countless and
continuously predicted dates before or since, but it's nearly always
because of some minor miscalculation or some misunderstanding about what
world means or what the end means or some conspiracy of
liberals/conservatives/Jews/etc and some prophets go on predicting and
making careers out of it, succeeding only when the prediction follows
some random event: "that storm hit New Orleans because God doesn't like
this or that." The laws get stricter, more complex, more contradictory
and more punishment-oriented but mayhem persists. The laws get more
liberal and don't dictate whom we marry, yet the end is still only nigh and
God's wrath increases. We wear more rubber bands, say more prayers, hunt
more witches -- and we turn to violence.
So to avoid
such depressing thoughts about the difficulty in preventing the horrors
that have defined human history since before human history we
demonstrate, we make up inspiring slogans, we walk around and run around
and wave signs and chant hey-hey ho-ho. We hide in our feeling of
community and nostalgia for the good old days of protesting real things
we could really do something about and we wear rubber bands and ribbons
the way we used to sacrifice goats to Yaweh -- and usually we're wrong
when we think we're affecting the random nature of existence.
We
go to Church, we pray for peace and for aunt Lucy not to die and for
rain or for the rain to stop or for our team to win. We punish the
sinners, we expel the unbelievers, because without them we'd have to
consider our efforts hopeless and our passions vapid. So sure, assemble
in the stadium and shout and pretend some simple "sensible" move will
end the pain and when you can't really define what that move, that law,
that policy, that program might actually be, why you can just trot our
the witches, the straw men and line them up in the blame gallery. After all there is an ample supply of idiots, liars and idiots out there and we must be so right because they are so wrong.
These days, anyone can drop a few zeros and turn a 60 million year old Allosaurus into a 6,000 year old walking companion for Sarah Palin ... because it's lonely out there!
ReplyDeleteApparently, according to some T-Rex DNA recovered, the closest relative now alive is the chicken. Speaking of dumb cluckers walking together. . .
ReplyDeleteSo I guess we'll be Sybil's together.
ReplyDeleteNam Sibyllam quidem Cumis ego ipse oculis meis vidi in ampulla. . . but then I'd had a few ampullae myself. You know how it is.
ReplyDeleteIt's all Greek to me...
ReplyDeleteAll Greek to me too. So, I predict humans will remain as predictable as ever. Paradigms are tough things.
ReplyDeleteHey even one dime is hard enough to hang on to. . .
ReplyDelete