James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
Yesterday I penned a little article, “We are not a polite society, never were, never will be,” which dealt with the high jinx of political intrigue when the United States was in the opening chapter of its history. The emotional violence was apparent if not endemic to “Our Founding Fathers,” however accomplished they were in intellectual sophistication.
Intellectual sophistication is key to my thoughts today on violence. Some time ago I read “The Quartet: The Second American Revolution” (2015) written by Joseph J. Ellis, an American historian, and dealt with the period from 1787 – 1789, and was about George Washington, John Jay, Alexander Hamilton and John Madison, authors of the Federalist Papers and the American Constitution. What was implicitly apparent was that Washington, Jay and Madison were the adults, while Hamilton, much younger, was something of the intellectual brat.
Ellis got the idea for this book from listening to some middle school students struggling to recite Lincoln’s “Gettysburg Address” – Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation . . .
The problem Ellis realized was the math of “Honest Abe” was wrong as the American nation was not created in 1776 but rather in 1787 when the Constitution was written, and George Washington did not become President of the United States until 1789.
The colonies after The American Revolution weren’t working well together armed only with the Articles of Confederation and a powerless Continental Congress. So these four men put their heads together and created essentially what exists to this day with the checks and balances of the Executive Branch, the Judicial Branch and the American House of Representatives and the United States Senate as the Legislative Branch. These counterbalancing and complementary components of the three branches of government have worked reasonably well.
WHAT WE THINK IS NOT NECESSARILY SO, AND HOW WE BEHAVE IS NOT NECESSARILY THE WAY WE THINK WE BEHAVE.
We have had a societal COVID-19 pandemic but also a political pandemic to match the disease leading to a season of outrageous disinformation fueled by toxic declarations from both presidential candidates: former Vice President Joseph Biden and President Donald Trump.
Like those middle level students reciting the “Gettysburg Address,” mechanically and robotically with no sense of its inaccuracies much less its essence, chances are there are few people reading this who are aware that violence starts with disinformation however innocent and harmless it is meant to be presented in the course of events.
The vitriolic exchange between people on the left and people on the right are equally misinformed, and while so engaged, have little sense of how this impacts the radical elements among their children. A miniscule segment of this youth population has managed to decimate the business districts of several metropolitan areas.
I no longer watch on television these human combustibles on reckless rampage. Equally true, I am bored to death with the claptrap of the left and the right with the quadrennial madness of this presidential election season. They both sound the same; both are accusatory of the other in terms of the cause and ineptitude of the pandemic; both talk of societal injustice, racism, and lack of jobs, poverty and discrimination as if it were a menu in a restaurant.
Hoodlums in every phase of human history have not only been cowards and bullies but rebels without a cause, without a clear agenda and without anybody being in charge. We saw this with people of all ages and all walks of life camped out in “Occupy Wall Street” only to collapse their tents and move on with nothing resolved. We aggravate over things having surrendered to mythological angst as if stick figures in the wind.
SOME MYTHS THAT SIMPLY WON’T GO AWAY
Myth 1:
Free public grammar school and high school education is not a right; it is a privilege.
Myth 2:
No one promised you a living; no one owes you a job.
When you attempt to do for others, what they best do for themselves, you weaken their resolve, and diminish them as persons.
This all started after WWII when little Jimmy and little Patsy were learning how to do long and short division, write a grammatical sentence, or spell common words, the drive was to treat everyone the same in school -- winners and losers -- as no one should damage the poor little dears delicate psyches.
Then “political correctness” came along with the ‘60s euphemisms protecting the delicate psyches, not only of children, but of everyone.
The thinking prevalent then was that nothing could be more damaging to our delicate psyches then to lose, fail, prove inadequate, or be unable to compete. We have had seventy-five years of this pabulum society and now it has come home to roost.
Myth 3:
Nothing is worse than for someone to declare you are an elitist.
It amazed me after my many years in corporate society benefiting from corporate welfare that this pabulum consciousness came out of the ‘60s but is now standard operating procedure. As society through government has become a welfare system, corporate society under the protection of government has become a welfare system as well.
In conventional corporate life, there was no place for Steven Jobs or Stephen Wozniak of Apple, Jeff Bezos of Amazon, Bill Gates of Microsoft, or Larry Page and Jergey Brin of Google, elitist individuals to the tee. They managed on their own to change the very nature of life on this planet.
Myth 4:
Genius is rare.
Nothing truly valuable arises from ambition or from a mere sense of duty; it stems rather from love and devotion towards men and towards objective things.
A human being is part of the whole called by us universe, a part limited in time and space. We experience ourselves, our thoughts, and feelings as something separate from the rest. A kind of optical delusion of consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us.
Comfort and happiness have never appeared to me as a goal. I call these ethical bases the ideal of the swine herd.
With fame I became more and more stupid, which, of course, is a very common phenomenon. There is far too great a disproportion between what one is and what others think one is, or at least what they say they think one is. But one has to take it all with good humor.
It’s not that I’m so smart; it’s just that I say with problems longer. I have no special gift, I am only passionately curious.
People flatter me as long as I don’t get in their way. The only way to escape the personal corruption of praise is to go on working. I am happy because I want nothing from anyone.
My power, my particular ability lies in visualizing the effects, consequences and possibilities, and the bearings on present thought of the discoveries of others. I grasp things in a broad way easily, I cannot do mathematical calculations easily. I do them not willingly and not readily. Others perform these details better.
We should take care not to make the intellect our god; it has, of course, powerful muscles, but no personality.
Only life lived for others is a life worthwhile.
Common sense is a collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen.
People are like the ocean: sometimes smooth and friendly, at other times stormy and full of malice. The important thing to remember is that they too are mostly made of water.
Perfection of means and confusion of aims seems, in my opinion, to characterize our age.
All our lauded technological progress – our very civilization – is like the ax in the hand of the pathological criminal.
As a human being, one has been endowed with just enough intelligence to be able to see clearly how utterly inadequate that intelligence is when confronted with what exists.
Small is the number of them that see with their own eyes and feel with their own hearts.
No problem can be solved from the same consciousness that created it. Thought is an end in itself, like music.
The greatest obstacle to international order is that monstrously exaggerated spirit of nationalism which also goes by the fair-sounding but missed name of patriotism.
Only a free individual can make a discovery.
Since our inner experience consist of reproductions and combinations of sensory impressions, the concept of a soul without a body seems to be empty and devoid of meaning.
Science without religion is lane, religion without science is blind.
As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality.
By painful experience, we have learned that rational thinking does not suffice to solve the problems of our social lives.
Study and, in general, the pursuit of truth and beauty is a sphere of activity in which we are permitted to remain children all our lives.
One cannot learn anything well as by experiencing it oneself.
Reference: Bite-Size Einstein, quotations compiled by Jerry Mayer and John P. Holms, St. Martin’s Press, New York, 1996.
Myth 5:
Saying “no” to your grown children, or to a friend who through their flagrant disregard for good sense is considered cruel and unusual punishment.
Myth 6:
We must search for our identity.
Myth 7:
Contentment is not a matter of choice but a matter of chance.
Myth 8:
Being totally “other-directed,” gregarious, a hardy fellow well met is the key to success, wealth and happiness.
Myth 9:
It is more important to be loved than respected.
Myth 10:
Thinking is more important than feeling.
VIOLENCE ON STEROIDS
A child doesn’t come into the world scarred with a vengeance to be a rebel with or without a cause. A child comes into the world helpless, vulnerable, totally dependent on the love, nurturing, affection and warmth of grownups, caregivers, in a community of solidarity who are dedicated to enhance the nature of the child by unselfish love and dedication so that the child might effectively utilize its inherent natural ability in the service of others; not by comparing nor competing, not through jealousy nor envy, but by adults acting as responsible mothers and father, not for gain nor advantage; not for pride nor bragging rights, but to enhance the child's development into a wholesome human being.
Still, when a child is no longer a child, and has figured out that to maintain itself as the center of its universe, disruption is key to quickly manipulate grownups to meet its juvenile demands. That juvenility now 75 years after WWII dominates American society.
A nation of spoiled brats has been created, and perpetuated since WWII in which want becomes need; attention is deemed necessary as opposed to never being found out doing a good deed; where the belief persists that poverty is a sin and no community should countenance that sin. Yet truth be told poverty has always been with us while attempts to stamp it out have only paradoxically increased its ugly presence as more people are pushed to exist on the dole. This brings us to Myth 11.
Myth 11:
Poverty causes crime, mental illness and inhuman treatment.
Contrast this with the status of the poor. Violence and criminality is not found dominant among the ranks of the very poor but of the idle rich and the want-to-be rich. These are society’s disrupters, not the poor who feel the day is a triumph when they have a roof over their heads, a warm bed to crawl into at night and a warm belly for besting hunger for a day.
Finally, we have lost our sense of community that has protected us from the ravages of the excesses described here: we are told we are a nation of believers in God that doesn’t include going to church; we are told we are a religious and caring nation that doesn’t include talking to the next door neighbor; we are told we are a melting pot of nations but that doesn’t include socializing with other ethnic groups; we have a national character freeze framed into a collective identity that has little to do with a shared reality.
James Hilton is correct: we must grow down to nourish our roots before we can grow up and regain our lost promise.