There
is a quality even meaner than outright ugliness or disorder, and
this meaner quality is the dishonest mask of pretended order,
achieved by ignoring or suppressing the real order that is struggling
to exist and to be served.
~ Jane Jacobs
Perhaps not
since Caligula appointed his horse to the Roman senate has the
political establishment gone so far out of its way to flaunt its
absurdity. The inanity is not confined to any particular factions;
it is pure bipartisanship that unites the politically-minded in
their efforts to bamboozle the booboisie with terrifying specters
and the kinds of implausible explanations of events that recall
childhood tales told around a late-night campfire.
The latest
entrant in this preposterousness marathon is Hollywood actor Danny
Glover, who informed the world that the devastating earthquake
in Haiti was occasioned by "global warming" and "climate
change." I don’t know whether Glover was trying to overtake
such men as Pat Robertson and Charles Colson – among others –
who offered their peculiar interpretations of the 2005 flooding
of New Orleans as an omen – or punishment – from God for failing
to halt legal abortions and/or fight the war on terror. Perhaps
Glover – having seen Al Gore’s efforts produce an Academy Award
"Oscar" – may have seen an opportunity for his own such
trophy.
Such comments,
standing by themselves, may be dismissed as the babblings of silly
minds. They occur, however, within the shadows of equally nonsensical
– and far more dangerous – practices undertaken by political institutions.
We live in the terminal days of Western civilization, and the
institutional interests that have wormed their ways into the fabric
of society – and which have long fed upon the resources and energies
of individuals – now desperately work to reinforce their collapsing
structures.
Our civilization
is overly-politicized; grounded in the principle of violence.
The state is the institutionalization of violence. But
force is antithetical to life, for it makes life be what it does
not choose to be; compels it to act contrary to the pursuit of
its self-interests. The state wars against the spontaneity and
autonomy that define life and make societies prosper.
This war
against life processes has produced nothing of a creative nature,
but much in the way of social and economic dysfunction. The "system"
doesn’t work as we were conditioned to believe that it would:
fostering peaceful, orderly, and productive social behavior. The
intellectual, economic, and moral underpinnings of our culture
are in a bankruptcy for which no Chapter 11 reorganization remedies
are possible. Constitutional principles do not govern the American
state any more than the Soviet Constitution – based on the American
model – restrained the Stalinist regime. Free-market concepts
and practices have been supplanted by government largesse as the
source of economic success and discipline. Government schools
are in shambles, while America leads the rest of the world in
the number of people held in prisons.
A rational,
intelligent response to all of this might have been for the political
establishment to reduce its coercive impulses and allow the creative
life-forces to reassert themselves. Instead, the state has intensified
its efforts to control the hundreds of millions of persons subject
to its authority. New "threats" (e.g., obesity, nitrogen,
under-inflated tires) are concocted with which to rationalize
increased police and regulatory powers; definitions of "terrorism"
are expanded to include criticism of government, opposition to
abortion, and the exercise of Second Amendment rights to own guns.
Warfare continues to destroy life, even as military schemers plot
to extend their butchery to new targets (Iran? Yemen?). Those
who oppose Obama’s policies are labeled by some media babblers
and a former president as "racists." Numerous "czars"
– defined as "absolute rulers" and "despots"
– have been appointed by presidential dictate to rule over various
sectors of American life; while auto manufacturers, banks, and
insurance companies have been effectively nationalized by fiat.
American
civilization is collapsing for the same reason the Soviet Union
did: the inability to sustain itself under the burden of its inner
contradictions and conflicts. The system is no longer capable
of being a catalyst for the production of the values upon which
life depends.
One of the
governmental responses to all of this has been the creation of
a Financial Crisis Commission – or "Crisis Commission"
for short. You can be assured that this commission – like governmental
agencies in general – will become a permanent fixture, if for
no other reason than the fact that the centrally-directed, vertically-structured
organizational model upon which all state systems are built, is
being challenged by decentralized horizontal networks.
The awareness of this transformation of social systems is what
has kept the institutionalists so agitated in recent decades.
The bogeyman threats with which the established order has kept
the booboisie in its obeisant position have, of late, been defined
in terms of their supposed permanency. The "war on terror"
will last forever, we have been told; the perils of "climate
change" will be with us forevermore; even a federal judge
– apparently unfamiliar with the lessons of chaos and complexity
– has ordered nuclear waste disposal decisions to account for
consequences extending up to one million years, a period
of time longer than mankind’s presence on the planet! "Problems"
of such endless durations will, of course, require the oversight
of a commission devoted to the control of such endless crises.
Such efforts
cloud the real "crisis" that the political/corporate
establishment does not want any of us to consider: the decline
and fall of the coercive, top-down model of social systems. As
happened with the collapse of prior civilizations, significant
social change took place, and change is incompatible
with the institutional needs for stability. Indeed, the
"status quo" can be regarded as a synonym for the "institutional
order." Civilizations always manage to become infected by
the virus of institutionalism, a symptom of which is that
we become attached to, and thus learn to value, the organizational
forms that once served as tools of cooperation, but were
later transformed into ends in themselves. (I have addressed
these processes in my earlier books.)
Thus do banks,
insurance companies, major manufacturing firms, and even the state
itself, come to be regarded as "too big to fail." Their
weakened foundations must be reinforced, we are told, by billions
upon billions of dollars being given to corporate giants, while
the state will be allowed to reverse its terminal condition by
an increased ingestion of its principal means of sustenance, namely,
the power of violence over human beings. Whatever threatens the
status quo becomes a threat against which the established order
must mobilize its forces. To such interests, individual liberty
becomes a form of entropy (i.e., energy otherwise unavailable
for productive use). Change – which expresses the very
nature of life itself – generates a "crisis" to which
a response must be made. Even "change" in the climate
can be used to reinforce – in the minds of Boobus – the "threat"
posed by any kind of variation. Have you really thought through
the absurdity of regarding a warmer or a cooler
environment as a threat to your existence? Our geologic history
has pulsated with climate changes to no apparent greater harm
than an inconvenience to established conditions.
Politicians
and government officials, along with media chatter-boxes and scribblers,
continue to preach the gospel of "stability" and "equilibrium,"
even though productive societies do not exhibit such qualities.
A creative world is quite unstable, with existing practices
being challenged by the forces of change. Nor does either the
marketplace or the life of an individual ever achieve equilibrium,
works toward, but never achieves, a steadfast position. But such
a world of inconstancy is troubling to the lifeless interests
– i.e., institutions – that seek to maintain the status quo.
Our attachments
to the established order have been reinforced by our acceptance
of the need to introduce more "security" into our lives.
We have learned to embrace "social security," "national
security," "homeland security," "investment
security," "neighborhood security," and countless
other expressions of our devotion to making our world safe from
the influences of change. To protect such interests, we have allowed
– and learned to insist upon – an expansion of governmental power
to control and regulate any conditions that might disturb our
acquired, child-like need for "security."
It is for
the purpose of resisting the centrifugal forces that are transforming
the vertical into the horizontal in our world, that such agencies
as the Crisis Commission will focus its efforts. There will be
no inquiries made as to the causes that have brought Western civilization
into decline. The voices of institutionalized verticality will
be heard to propose such extensions of governmental power as will
be consistent with keeping the general public in a state of contentment.
The "crisis" to which this body will address itself
will be limited to the threat that decentralizing forces will
have to the country’s true "owners" (i.e., the established
order).
Civilization
– not the institutional order – is in a critical condition,
one brought on by the failure of our intellectual and spiritual
immune systems to resist the virus of institutionalism. This crisis
is not to be found in Washington, or Detroit, or on Wall Street,
but in our thinking about who we are as individuals and
as members of society. As long as we revere the interests of organizations
more highly than we do our own; as long as we continue to invest
the lives of our children and grandchildren as resources for institutional
consumption, this crisis will continue unto the disintegration
of civilization itself.
Human history
has seen a repetition of such patterns in the growth and decline
of civilizations. Our culture is not fated to such ends, but we
must confront the crisis in our thinking – yours and mine, not
"theirs" – if we are to reverse the entropic course
on which we are now headed. Each of us must, individually, abandon
our subservience to the authority of others. In this connection,
we might wish to recall the words of the poet Ezra Pound: "a
slave is one who waits for someone to come and free him."