Tuesday, October 28, 2014

As it happeneth

As it happeneth to the fool, so it happeneth even to me; and why was I then more wise? 
-Ecclesiastes 2:15- 


For a long time after I began to write here, it was enough to enumerate the foolishness of the "other side," the Tea Party, the NRA, Fox News. . . and as the man said, the danger is in becoming the monster you oppose, because one gets used to the other side being not only wrong but demonic and at best, foolish.  It does not follow that if mine enemy is wrong, I must be right. It's a vanity we all share. The model of the world we form in our heads; the model we nourish and prop up with facts, with truisms and tropes, with axioms and articles of faith, is not the real world any more than the Tao we can discuss is the real Tao. Can it be that our cherished wisdom is no more than a vanity? 

Watching Bill Maher's panel of the wise the other night was like being at the same circus you've been watching for too long.  When the clown car pulls into the ring, you already know the names and number of the clowns and when the discussion turned to the Washington State school shooting I knew it was only a matter of time until every last one climbed out, from the NRA to Drone Strikes.  But even a circus car can hold only so many.  There's hardly room for objective truth and no part for him in the show.  Why drone strikes When Muslim armies are raping torturing and beheading innocents?  Because the drone strike clown is part of the circus crew and the mission of the crew is assigning blame, prescribing from the official pharmacopoeia as well as to blame everyone but the perpetrators,  and of course he's a distraction, a way of substituting an answer we have, an argument we favor to any real discussion of what happened, its relation to other happenings and a way of attaching blame to what just might be random.

Last out of the clown car was the editor in chief of The Daily Beast to tell us that "surveys show" the people want background checks, which might have prevented this and the NRA was opposed. Facts are that we have had mandatory checks for decades, the gun in question was bought pursuant to one and was registered to a legal owner. But it's a small car and the clown has to stretch his legs.

So it happeneth to the fool and I'm getting tired of it happening to me.  Just what is the risk to any one of us from Ebola, from ISIS insurgents,  Central American child refugees,  racist police -- and how does it compare with the risk of heart disease,  urban street gangs and soccer moms texting while driving?  Don't ask because you'll become the enemy yourself, the enemy of those who insist on there being trends and conspiracies and the ever growing risks of living in America today.  Yes, the subject of drone strikes came up (Cornell West) as supporting evidence of Western sin along with the details of how "we"  arbitrarily created countries to our benefit and thus earned the enmity of the Muslim world.  Did anyone bother to ask if this mechanism made thousand year enemies of Japan and Germany after we conquered and occupied them?  No because that would challenge the model of Islamic innocence.  Do we examine the possibility that the media circus surrounding any of the events CNN chooses to obsess about every week or so, has made it glamorous for disturbed teenagers to become a bright shining star and go out like a supernova?  No, that distracts from the need to obsess about the NRA and to reenact our passion play about weapons of war, spraying high caliber, armor piercing, cop killer bullets and the total absence of all gun control measures. The chess board is set up and only the official pieces can be played.

And how then are we wise?  How do we decide what's true and what the risks are and who is to blame?  There is much written about this question and related questions of  how we see the world as we are, through rose colored or dark glasses.  The psychologist Paul Slovic's oft quoted article in Science, about risk perception theory and what he called affect heuristics, the particular heuristics and biases people invent to interpret the amount of risk in their environment.  Is the risk of Ebola running rampant to be compared with the existing risk of the flu, (about 2.5 million deaths per year) much less all infectious diseases still endemic in the US?  How many die because enlightened people oppose vaccinations?  Indeed fear of science rides in that clown car as it does in the Tea Powered version. Is the NRA opposition to study of gun crimes any different than the steadfast refusal of their opposition to discuss ( or to read or admit the existence of)  gun laws and their statistical correlation to positive results?

Did Florida's revised self defense laws really "Make it illegal for black people to go outside" as one pundit said about a case that did not, by his own admission, involve that law, or is that the result of vision through a bias darkly?  Did a  "gentle giant" really commit a robbery and assault a police officer or is his innocence to be presumed and to the extent that we need no fair trial to hang the policeman?  The answer was in the bias, the affect heuristics of the observer and the judgement to which he is accustomed to snap.  Does the fact that over 90% of the shootings of young black men are by young black men enter into the equation and cause wonder about the lack of  media circuses when that happens?  Can we really not go to the movies any more, or send out children to school where they are statistically safer than they are at home or driving with mom and her smart phone?

Can we see current events and the surrounding hoopla as anything but a cosmic frame shop, selling framed reproductions of  paint by the numbers reality?  Should we look at the news of the day as another day's entry in the logbook of the ship of fools?  Will our inherent nature ever let us be the rational beasts we pretend to be?  

 "For there is no remembrance of the wise more than that of the fool forever; seeing that which now is in the days to come shall all be forgotten.  And how dieth the wise man?  as the fool."

3 comments:

  1. Captain Fogg: “Anyone who tries to cripple Democracy, disable an elected government and lie and buy their way into power is a damned traitor in my book.

    Yes, and the smoke and mirrors didn’t start 6 years ago with “I hope he fails” but long before when Bush #41 made reference to the “L” word. Politics has never been a clean business but we have not seen this level of dirt, deception, dishonesty, demagoguery, legislative obstruction, and partisan insurrection since the Civil War. Birthers, Truthers, Flat Earthers, character assassins, vote suppression, a threatened prosecution of a president for the crime of being biracial, bullying unarmed and defenseless women in a public places by gun-toting thugs, partisanship by intimidation … frankly I feel abused by a system run amuck.

    In my book, anyone who lies should never be trusted; yet, lies and deceptions have become standard operating procedure because voters reward cheats, scoundrels, and liars with election victories – the greatest injustice of all. When our so-called leaders are rotten to the core, the disease metastasizes cancer-like into every corner of society. Unless people come to their senses, this will not end peacefully.

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  2. Can we even tell truth from lies any more? I'm no longer comfortable with the idea that any of us are or can be rational and objective, or in the long run able to make rational choices about our future. Perhaps our ideas about Capitalism, about various philosophies of government are all based on a false idea: that people are rational and will act in their own best interests.

    After all Capitalism has become incredibly good at training us to make stupid choices, to believe ridiculous, trendy ideas, to buy when we don't need ot and to buy the wrong things, from vehicles to politicians. It's become possible to convince people to do virtually anything or to sit still while it's done to them with a smile on their faces. Floridians want honest government so they support the largest crook in history. They admire military people so they support someone forced to resign his commission to avoid Court Marshal and prison time -- because he's a hero like all military men. A candidate who voted for a project everybody hates accuses the opponent who opposes it of having supported it and his followers smile in agreement.

    There is no evidence for sanity or reason and the race is not to the swift or the battle to the strong, nor does food come to the wise or wealth to the brilliant or favor to the learned; but time and chance happen to them all. Is it worth the effort to be wise? Is it even possible to trust our own reason as anything but something we make to justify our urges, affinities, and associations? Are our efforts anything but futile?

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  3. You are right (O) CT(O) PUS, the root of our problem lies not with the politicians but rather with the people who elect them.

    Frankly I believe most people are basically honest. I also believe many who don't vote understand the problem but believe it doesn't make a difference and many who do vote don't have a clue what they are voting for. They just know the sound bites sound good.

    Call me a cynic and a skeptic but I doubt much will change. At least not in my remaining lifetime.

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