Saturday, November 14, 2015

Back to the Past

"No arts; no letters; no society; and which is worst of all, continual fear, and danger of violent death: and the life of man, solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short."

Hobbes' horror, Reagan's utopia.

One mythopoeic tendency in American political rhetoric is to long for a better time in the past that America needs to return to -- and will,  if only we elect the illiterate who flunked Middle School history and knows nothing about economics, law or foreign affairs.   Things always used to be better and there was always a golden age, from Eden to Jerusalem, to Rome, to La Belle Epoch. Nearly every period in the past is caused to have some redeeming factor that makes us long for it nostalgically.  In our imagined past, we were  or would be heroes with opportunities, not peasants with none.


I'd love to confront the political blowhards promising to make us a "great Nation" again because I seem to have missed that period of greatness and it may be that times we look wistfully back to as "simpler" seemed pretty damned horrific at the time.  I even sometimes doubt the premise that I had more freedom back when where you could eat, where you could sleep and with whom were tightly controlled.  Gender and race meant an awful lot to the government and your neighbors in our great nation.  I must have had my eyes closed to that period of peace and tranquility when the certainty of nuclear annihilation hung over us like a patient etherized upon a table,  Hung like some lynched teenager in a land where you can't pass anti-lynching laws because of the Klan's influence in Congress and thousands of us died every week, killing millions for "our freedoms." --. but oddly, even though at any moment we are the greatest and best and most powerful and glorious nation that ever was or will be, it always used to be better.  The best of times is so tightly bound to the worst of times, they are one and the same.

Maintaining this fiction must be important to the people who teach us history and ethics and government policy because much, if not most, of what they say depends on framing, distorting, editing, redacting and inventing a past where there were no taxes or regulations and thus all businesses succeeded, everyone was free and prosperous  and Christian except for the lazy, and often at night, when the old folks were at home, the "darkies" were gay.

It's not to say that Americans and America haven't done great things, it's to say that they had nothing to do with that parallel myth: the ever more restrictive and regulatory government with ever increasing taxes hindering growth, individual success and that ubiquitous aspiration we call, in our narcissism,  the American Dream.  Gee, I'd like things to be better.  How exclusively American.  Golden age?  It musta been before my time, and my Father's and his.

But of course we have Trump, we have Carson, we have Bush as pretenders to power (and pretenders to being qualified) and they're all going to repaint and re-gild that shining city on the hill by building a moat around it. A shining mansion maintained by serfs, barefoot and pregnant and like the survivors of Bush's shock and awe, thanking God for their freedom as they starve in the dust.

There were times though.  the times of our desultory flirtations with confidence and a view to great things.  We've had our per astera ad aspera days that led to feats the world had never been able to do and isn't it interesting how the good old days shamans want to prevent that happening again?  Back to the the past, to the golden age. It hangs in the air at our "debates"  but the meaning is 'abandon hope,' Arbeit macht Frei, God's in his heaven and the future is in the past.

9 comments:

  1. I want to point out on this sad day that these Islamic madmen are looking backward to their own golden age, hoping to bring it back. Allah may be great, but you make shit smell like roses.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Good post! This morning, I resurrected an older post from the archives, Living with terrorism -- my life in Paris from 1995 thru 1999. If there is any moral to this story, it is this: Sometimes our own actions have more negative impact ... compared to what any terrorist can do to us.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The news this morning called the attack the "worst since WW II" which is typical journalistic hyperbole a hundred deaths Vs. tens of millions is an unforgivable comparison, but that's what they do to make money. The Parisians I saw interviewed on the street claimed they weren't afraid and having driven (and walked) the streets of that city, I concur. A car will get you long before a Syrian with a gun. The whole purpose of this thing was to frighten. One counters it by refusing to be frightened and ironically, the French seem far less frightened than the folks in Keokuk Iowa were when New York was attacked.

    Religion-fed insanity and the institutions thereof won't go away soon. I think it's going to be a long fight and I'm very sure Muslims will suffer more than anyone else. They already are looking at the typical target of ISILs wrath. The shining charnel house they want to build on the ruins of civilization is already filling up with Muslim corpses. They do these things to warn us to stay out of it yet it will likely insure that we do not and even basically peaceful people like me are dreaming of nuclear holocaust and seas of molten glass where Syria used to be.

    Others of course will whimper like it's the end of the world and look for reasons to take the blame for it, but even if the West has a nasty history in the Middle East and elsewhere, this isn't about us, it's about that ancient Mesopotamian apocalyptic mythos: let's make that cosmic creation battle myth the future, the cosmic end times battle of good Vs. Evil that's plagued the Abrahamic religions since Ezekiel. Muslim Eschatology isn't unique, the end times recapitulating the creation struggle between the deity and chaos. Schöpfung Und Chaos in Urzeit Und Endzeit - it's an ancient obsession. Problem is that Evil always thinks it's good and the most zealous religious people are the least likely to understand what the mythiology was trying to teach.

    From what I've heard so far, the G20 meeting in Ankara has an element of unity among adversaries. Can we speculate that this would be a far bigger danger than ISIS contemplates, thinking as did all would-be saviors to date have done? that some deity is going to back their slaughter, whether it's of the innocents or the guilty?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Apparently, southern white middle aged men are getting the message. And ending it all prematurely. At least they had their guns for emotional warmth. One little sliver of a silver fringed cloud.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Excuse me, but the non-sequitur club meets Thursday. This is Sunday

      Delete
  5. Religious fundamentalism, regardless of faith is dangerous to ones mental health as it defies reason.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Religious war is defined as killing people over who has the better imaginary friend.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Most politics is about imaginary friends too Think those bastards have your interests at heart? .

    ReplyDelete
  8. I have grown to believe very few do Captain, from either political party. However they may be a few more in the blue party than the red party.

    What we need is a truly white (figuratively speaking only) political party that is capable of concerning itself with the interests of the people in consistently ethical ways.

    ReplyDelete

We welcome civil discourse from all people but express no obligation to allow contributors and readers to be trolled. Any comment that sinks to the level of bigotry, defamation, personal insults, off-topic rants, and profanity will be deleted without notice.