THINKING ABOUT
WEIRDNESS OF THE TIMES!
Conjugate the absurd
with the ridiculous and you produce the boring!
James R. Fisher, Jr.,
Ph.D.
© September 28, 2014
NOTE TO READERS:
I hastily posted this in a slightly different form. Please accept my apologies as I've deleted the original.
It is truly a strange time when people are so hypersensitive
to what is normal -- incessantly talking about nothing on a cell or smartphone
-- that communication was bound to prove tedious.
At Christmas time if you slip and wish someone a “Merry
Christmas,” you panic, and quickly correct yourself to say “Happy
Holiday.”
A National Basketball Association (NBA) owner makes racial
remarks about African American basketball players in the privacy of his home in
the company of his girlfriend, who records the conversation then makes it
public, a girlfriend half his age upon whom he has showered gifts costing in the millions, and for this he loses his NBA franchise and is banned from the sport
for life.
A general manager of another NBA franchise shares an e-mail
with racial content with some other NBA owner over the phone, and he is likely
to lose his job.
You can get into trouble referring to a woman as a girl,
forgetting the differentiation between “Ms.” and “Mrs.”
National Football League (NFL) athletes have always trash
talked to each other in the spirit of the game.
Now, they can be fined and their teams penalized for the use of the “n”
word ending in a hard “er” or “a.”
In my walks through the neighborhood, I often pass an
elementary school when the students are leaving school for the day.
I hear girls as well as boys, blacks as well as whites
shouting at each other with the “f” word or its compound variety of “m-f,” and
then laugh as if it is the most natural thing to say, and these are not yet
teenagers. Should we expect this
language suddenly to stop when they get older?
I don’t think so.
Whatever happened to “sticks and stones may break my bones
but names will never hurt me?”
Reared Irish Roman Catholic, I recall being called a “cod
cruncher” and “papist” – didn’t know what that meant – a Mick or Paddy for
being Irish, a carrot top for my reddish blond hair, a Hibe – I didn’t know it
was the short for Hibernian or characteristic of the Irish and not as a
compliment -- Cat-licker for being Catholic, and Mackerel Snapper for being
forbidden to eat meat on Fridays under the pain of sin.
My da, who was a bit of a pugilist, told me to ignore all
these references, “Don’t do anything until they touch you, Jimmy, and then hit
them in the fricken mouth!” Easy for him
to say.
* * *
My sense is that life has become absurd to the point of the ridiculous. Entrepreneurs, on the other
hand, spell it as “opportunity."
They conjugate our angst into products and programs to exploit this to
their advantage and our delight. Take
television's "situation comedies," for example.
We are so afraid of offending anyone that when we make a
Freudian slip, we apologize profusely. Freud suggested that such slips were our
unconscious coming to the surface, or an expression of the way we actually feel,
and of course, we don't want anyone to know how we really feel about them or
anything else, leastwise to ourselves.
The creative geniuses of social network developers have
latched on to this absurdity to ridiculous success, making many of them
billionaires and not long out of their nappies.
More than a billion souls across the globe post their
personal absurd anxieties and ridiculous inanities on these social networks
with photographs and text to an equally anxious and inane audience.
Cable television 24/7 news hits its audience with
"breaking news" every five minutes, of course, between
commercials. You would think the world
could not survive without this information, yet if you take stock, as I have done, the
programs day-to-day are so similar repeating the same anxiousness, the same
hypersensitivity, and in the same anxious and monotonous staccato.
We get comic relief with Bill O'Reilly on cable TV, and on
cable radio the same with Rush Limbaugh and Howard Stern. The content of their shows deal with the same cesspool of
material of network and cable news, despite O'Reilly insistence that with him "the spin stops
here," but as entertainment. We love
to be entertained.
Whatever happened to “there go I but for the grace of God”
when we would display charity when someone fell from grace? Or the biblical idea that “he who be without
sin cast the first stone”?
Apparently, charity and forgiveness have been expunged
from our conscience. We are inundated with the message 24/7 that "the sky is falling" so when it is falling, we are too bored to pay attention, too insensitive to notice much less care to our regret.
* * *
Most recently National Public Radio Television presented a
several hour hagiography of the “Roosevelt’s”: Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin
Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt. Film
biographer Ken Burns was the creator of this entertaining assembly.
I'm sure it enjoyed a huge audience given we are bereft of
leadership today. But my wonder is if the
Roosevelt's type of leadership is what is needed.
Having read books on these people, their sins seem strangely more provocative on film, further evidence of how powerful this
media.
Scholars, biographers, journalists and pundits parade across
the TV screen on what these people were like.
We hunger for evidence of their human frailties making our sins feel
venial in comparison.
For example, Teddy Roosevelt comes across as a manic
achiever with a perverse need to destroy in order to create. His legacy of hegemony or empire is brought
out to give the impression that the sleepy United States in late nineteenth and
early twentieth century would still be inclined to isolationism were it not for
the bravado of diminutive Teddy.
The Theodore Roosevelt era, rich in achievement, also
demonstrated the mindset of the overachiever and the implicit dangers that
might engender.
To wit, he graduated from Harvard, Phi Beta Kappa, Magnum
Cum Laude, with a class ranking in the top third of his class, but was
especially proud to point out that none of those who graduated ahead of him
"were gentlemen.” Not only was he
born into elitism, but elitism was the fire in his belly.
Franklin Roosevelt, on the other hand was a mommy’s boy to
the end with the embedded solipsism that goes with such nurturing.
Just the opposite of his cousin, Franklin was tall,
handsome, and a charmer but hardly a serious student. Elected four times to the presidency, but
living only three months into his fourth term, he left a mess for Harry S.
Truman, his vice president, to handle that still haunts us to this day.
At the Yalta Conference, near the end of WWII, FDR, Great
Britain’s Winston Churchill and the Soviet Union’s Joseph Stalin divided the
world, especially the Middle East, into the quagmire that it has become three
quarters of a century later.
Patrician Roosevelt and Churchill acted as
if the world revolved around their axis, failing to correctly gauge or
understand their pedestrian adversary, Stalin.
He had them for lunch at Yalta, got everything he wanted and gave up
little in the bargain. For that blunder,
the world has been paying a heavy price ever since.
Now we come to Eleanor Roosevelt. Much as Ken Burns had wonderful things to say
about her, not dodging her husband's great betrayal, she was clearly the
brightest star in this firmament, more able, centered, mature, intelligent, and
effective than this lot of men, including Stalin.
Eleanor was also patrician by birth, but never wore her
elitism on her sleeve for her instinct was to treat all people with
dignity. My wonder is where FDR's
"New Deal” would have been without her influence. She was not absurd or ridiculous but close to
divine.
* * *
The Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) era is mine as
well. My da worked on Roosevelt’s
WPA. I now benefit from FDR’s Social
Security System and graduated from land grant public universities, or otherwise
would have been unable to attain a university education, so I am grateful for that.
Education has led to the career I have had. But it was what FDR didn’t do that counts. He didn’t get in my way, but let me find my
own way on my own terms.
Now, it seems people are looking for safe guards in an
uncertain world. They are consumed with security
and willing to sacrifice many freedoms for it, when the socio-economic climate
and geopolitical status of the world is constantly in flux.
Fear has the face of people who look different, speak and
dress different than we do. This is a
bias that is deep in the American psyche. African Americans have been here for hundreds
of years, and yet it was reported today (September 28, 2014) in The Tampa Bay Times that “Black people in the Tampa Bay Area are
at least six times as likely to be arrested for marijuana possession as white
people.” Clearly, fear lurches in the
shadows of our collective minds.
People tend to compound the situation by turning away from reality, ceasing to work for a living, but living to work for things, using
acquisitiveness as therapy to quell their anxieties, craving a more exciting
life often retreating into self-negating habits, needing a bigger home, nicer
car, more influential friends, and the required accoutrements to push boredom to the back of their minds.
My wonder is when appearing to be interesting or being
obsessed with the lives of interesting people became more important than being
interested in something of and for itself.
It didn’t originate with Facebook and other facsimiles of socio-electronic networking. Don’t blame these creators for simply exploiting our preoccupations to their advantage. My wonder is when thinking became akin to punishment?
It didn’t originate with Facebook and other facsimiles of socio-electronic networking. Don’t blame these creators for simply exploiting our preoccupations to their advantage. My wonder is when thinking became akin to punishment?
* * *
A “ho hum” column by New York Times columnist David Brooks
caught my attention: “Things aren’t that bad, but many leaders are.” Now that is a loaded declarative
comment. It stunned me, and when I read
the article I was incredulous that Brooks had written it.
I know this journalist with a fine conscience has to write
these columns to get paid. I sense that
like the rest of us he has his bad days, when he doesn’t have anything
important to say, but yet must knock out a column.
True, I don’t have to read his column. And if I read it, I don’t have to get
exercised about it, but unfortunately, I was and am because I can’t believe,
given the tectonic shift in the nature of leadership that he believes what he
has written.
In the column, he’s saying our cities are doing great:
“Widening the lens,” he says, “we’re living in an era with the greatest
reduction in global poverty ever -- across Asia and Africa.”
Well, now, he knows that is not quite true. Even South Africa, which once found Bantus living better than most Africans, share the problem of poverty with the rest of the world today. With the exception of pockets of wealth, more than 50 percent across the globe are still living in poverty.
Well, now, he knows that is not quite true. Even South Africa, which once found Bantus living better than most Africans, share the problem of poverty with the rest of the world today. With the exception of pockets of wealth, more than 50 percent across the globe are still living in poverty.
We in the West like to blame it on the lack of initiative, but I have
seen it first hand, and initiative has little to do with such status.
If this is an endorsement of capitalism, it leaves out pollution
and political instability fostered by aggressive industrialization at the
expense of the rural life known to nearly three billion souls (China, India,
and Africa), not to mention the civil wars and jihad terrorism plots that feed
on disparity, inequality, chaos and ignorance.
Given David Brooks’ upbeat picture, what he claims the world
suffers from is not enough elite leaders, leaders I suspect like Theodore and
Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Elitism,
he claims, is the key to the world’s troubles.
This must be music to the ears of graduates pouring out of our elite
universities.
I’m not sure we’re ready for a manic Teddy or a solipsistic
mommy’s boy Franklin.
To make his point he reminds us of the elitism of our
Founding Fathers, and where would we be without them, right?
Absurd and ridiculous as this premise is, he suggests the
antithesis of elitism is characterized in Senator Ted Crux and Karl Marx who
champion the individual in the masses for having the capability of leading and
ruling and bringing about social justice and change.
I confess I am acquainted with Marx and his writing, but not Crux and his. Much of what Marx said makes sense to me. Lenin and Stalin didn’t establish the communism that Marx pontificated, but another form of elitism.
Isn't it ironic that communist China is becoming increasingly capitalistic while democratic Europe and the United States are becoming increasingly socialistic?
I confess I am acquainted with Marx and his writing, but not Crux and his. Much of what Marx said makes sense to me. Lenin and Stalin didn’t establish the communism that Marx pontificated, but another form of elitism.
Isn't it ironic that communist China is becoming increasingly capitalistic while democratic Europe and the United States are becoming increasingly socialistic?
It is counterintuitive to claim people can lead without
managers and leaders because that is what we know.
If American is an idea that is constantly maturating, and I think it is, it suggests an increasingly well educated population may find a better way than the elite have saddled us with.
If American is an idea that is constantly maturating, and I think it is, it suggests an increasingly well educated population may find a better way than the elite have saddled us with.
From my point of view, we are at the brink of a watershed
moment. The world is literally turning
upside down on how it should be run, and who should be running it.
Stated another way, the current concept of leadership is as stale as day old bread albeit still in place, but crumbling.
Stated another way, the current concept of leadership is as stale as day old bread albeit still in place, but crumbling.
Those with answers programmed to wait and react to elite
authority, and then obediently clean up the mess that leadership leaves behind is unraveling.
Clean up has been the role of workers since the beginning of
time. It is changing because a select
one percent of the populations no longer has the answers, or even understands
the problems. They have been living too
long like the “Flying Dutchman” floating about the globe isolated from reality,
failing with impunity, and now that day
is drawing to a close.
* * *
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