The
power of population is so superior to the power of the earth to produce
subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the
human race. The vices of mankind are active and able ministers of depopulation.
They are the precursors in the great army of destruction, and often finish the
dreadful work themselves. But should they fail in this war of extermination,
sickly seasons, epidemics, pestilence, and plague advance in terrific array,
and sweep off their thousands and tens of thousands. Should success be still
incomplete, gigantic inevitable famine stalks in the rear, and with one mighty
blow levels the population with the food of the world. --Thomas Manthus-1798
As a small boy, I once transferred most of an anthill
population from its natural digs in our front yard to a gallon jar of fresh
dirt, sprinkled it with a little sugar (in the cartoons ants are always freaks
for sugar, right?) and then left the ants on their own. Of course the day came
when all I had was a jar full of dry earth, ant shit and the desolation of
their parched little carcasses. I’d guess that it was the lack of water that
finally got ‘em.
But the most interesting thing in retrospect -- if a jar of
dead bugs can be called interesting -- is this: Up until the very end they
seemed to be happily and obliviously busy. They constructed an ant society with
all of its ant facilities, made more baby ants and did all those things ants do
that the proverbial grasshopper is famous for not doing. Obviously Christian
predestinationists to the last ant, they met the grasshopper’s grim fate by
another route, and did not look at all surprised in death.
Now you’d think that the lesson of the ants would be obvious
as hell to any non-intoxicated individual with a grade school education. Never
mind that many people since Malthus, as my sainted daddy would have put it,
“Done drove the point in the ground and broke it clean off.” Never mind that
Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb
was a best seller and remains a classic. Never mind that James Lovelock, the
nerdish forward thinking Englishman who 99 percent of Americans never heard of,
delivered unto us yet one more time the worst truth in human history, the Gaia
Hypothesis. Which is a fancy way of saying we cannot continue to devour our
planet forever because it amounts to self-cannibalism.
Lovelock also convincingly argued that due the side effects
of this species expiration, now acknowledged as global warming, the equator
will look like Mars at some point relatively soon, with the surviving 20
percent of humans now alive, or perhaps in the next generation, living near the
North and South Poles.
As be to expected, the few very comfortable elite folks on
this earth said of Lovelock: “This guy is full of shit, a nutcase being adored
by a bunch of naked tattooed pagans and gloomy intellectual types,” both of
which number among my favorite kinds of people.
Those pagans who allowed themselves to feel and not just
intellectualize about the earth’s condition, and those scientists who did not
require computer modeling to do simple subtraction, recognized that these are
the most challenging of times in human history, “challenging” being a polite
term for the fact that that humanity is gonna die off big time, if not sooner,
then later. Call it the secular version of The
End Times.
But not much later, in light of the brief span Homo sapiens
hath shat, frolicked, killed and exceeded their Mastercard limits upon the
earth, which is less than a second in geological time. Already we are on the
way out because we did not have the common sense of lizards, which lasted tens
of millions of years longer without so much as a calculator, much less
computerized eco models.
A bunch of DNA molecules gave us this aberrant evolution of
brain and consciousness that enabled us to dominate everything else and get
into the totally fucked situation in which we now find ourselves. The monkey
got so smart he took over everything, ate most of it, drove over the rest, then
stuck the roadkill on its own dick as a nuclear warhead, and after having
threatened what was left around him, set out to destroy even that small
remaining scrap of his ruined earthly turf. Is this God’s cruelest joke?
Global warming asmange medicine
If mankind were discovered on a dog’s hide, the owner would
give the dog a mange dip. Or if the earth were a Petri dish, we would be called
pathology. Problem is, though, Mama Earth tends to shed pathogens off her skin,
which for us pathogens, is the ultimate catastrophe.
When forced to look at catastrophe on this order of
magnitude, we either go numb in shock or look in delusion to something bigger,
or at least something with more grandeur than Mother Nature flushing humanity
down the toilet. Otherwise, one must accept the both ugly and the weirdly beautiful
prospect of oblivion. Meanwhile, we begin too late to “make better choices.”
Grim choices that do nothing but postpone the inevitable, which are called
better ones and sold to us to make ourselves feel better about our toxicity.
Burn corn in your gas tank. Go green, with the help of Monsanto. But
not many can be concerned even with the matter of better choices. Few can truly
grasp the fullness of the danger because there is no way they can get their
minds around it, no way to see the world in its entirety. The tadpole cannot
conceive of the banks of the pond, much less the wooded watershed that feeds
it. But old frogs glimpse of it.
Still,
there is choice available, even a superior choice -- the moral one. Accept the
truth and act upon it. Take direct action to eliminate human
suffering, and likewise to eliminate our own comfort. We can say no to scorched
babies in Iraq. We can refuse to drive
at all and refuse to participate in a dead society gone shopping. We can quit
being so addicted to rationality and embrace the spirit. Rationality
simply turns back on itself like a mobius strip. Too much thinking, too much
cleverness on the monkey’s part leads it to believe it can come up with
rational solutions for what rationalizing itself hath wrought.
All the green energy sources and eating right and voting
right cannot fix what has been irretrievably ruined, but only make life amid
the ruination slightly more bearable. Species gluttony is nearly over and we’ve
eaten the earth and pissed upon its bones. Not because we are cruel by nature
(though a case might be made for stupidity) but because the existence of
consciousness necessarily implies each of us as its individual center, the
individual point of all experience and thus all knowing. The accumulated
personal and collective wounds fester and become fatal because there is no way
to inform the world that we must surrender our assumptions, even if we wanted
to. Which we do not because assumptions are the unseen cultural glue, the DNA
of civilization. If we did so, the crash would be immediate.
So we postpone transformation through truth, and stick with
what has always worked -- empire and consumption. And we twiddle our lives away
through insignificant fretting about mortgages and health care and political
parties, and pretend the whole of American life is not a disconnect. Hell, all
of Western culture has become a disconnect. Somebody needs to tell the
Europeans too; progressive Americans give them entirely too much credit for the
small positive variation in their cultures and ours. We both get away with it
only so long as the oil and the entertainment last.
The front page of Tuesday’s newspaper tells me that 41
million motorists will gas up and hit the road today, July 3. Another five
million will sip drinks and read magazines while zipping through the
stratosphere in 747s that burn the day’s oxygen production of a 44,000-acre rainforest
in the first five minutes of flight just getting off the ground and gaining
altitude, adding to the more than 110 million annual tons of
atmosphere-altering chemtrail gasses, some of which will remain to hold heat in
the upper atmosphere for almost 100 years.
Below it all are the spreading pox like blotches of economic
and ecological ruins of dead North American towns and city cores, such as
downtown Gary, Indiana; Camden, Newark, Detroit . . . all those places we
secretly accept as being hellish because, well, that’s just what happens when
blacks take over, isn’t it? Has anyone seen downtown Detroit lately? Of course
not. No one goes there any more. Miles of cracked pavement, weeds and abandoned
buildings that look like de Chirico’s Melancholy and Mystery of a Street. Hell, for all practical purposes it is
uninhabited, though a scattering of drug addicts, alcoholics and homeless
insane people wander in the shadows of vacant rotting skyscrapers where water
drips and vines crawl through the lobbies, including the Ford Motor
Company’s stainless steel former headquarters. (See the works of Chilean-born
photographer Camilo José Vergara.) It
is the first glimpse of a very near future, right here and now for all to see.
The hearts of even our most avowedly thriving cities are
just a dead, reduced to nothing more than designated spending zones,
collections of bars and banks and overpriced eateries lodged at the center of a
massive tangle of overpasses and freeways designed for a nation of soft people
hurtling themselves through the suburbs in petroleum powered exoskeletons in
search of fried chicken, or into the city for the lonely monetized experience
called urban nightlife. Which is no life at all, but rather posturing in
lifelike poses amid simple drunkenness and engorgement.
We allow ourselves to imagine the worst is somewhere in yet
another future so we can continue without owning decision. Love of comfort
being the death of courage, we continue the familiar commoditized life, the
only one we have known. Is it not true that our entire understanding of courage
as we know it is about braving some unknown? About making the socially
unaccepted and dangerous choice? Stepping forward in the face of the wars and
evil mechanics of our own particular time?
Empire and its inevitable permanent state of warfare
flourishes not because evil men are at the helm, but because the men at the
helm are even weaker and more in denial than we are. (Look at Dick Cheney. The
guy is a nervous wreck wrapped in arrogance and denial.) And so their
uninformed and crude confidence is assuring to both them and us. We elect the
worst among ourselves in increasing avoidance of ourselves and they are
validated by our endorsement. Evil men seeking empire did not make us or the
world this way. We made their existence possible through our denial, love of
ease and non-accountability.
The most
dangerousquestion in the
world
Yet, I dare say that comfort is not the most important thing
in most American lives. It is just the only thing we are offered in exchange
for our toil and the pain of ordinary existence in such an age. Consequently,
it is all we know. Meaningless work, then meaningless comfort and distraction
in the too-few hours between sleep and labor. But we settled for that and continue
to do so. The day will never come when we stand around the office water cooler
and ask one another: “Why in the hell are we even here today?” It’s the most
dangerous question in America and the Western world.
Some few of us are in a hellish limbo, simply waiting for
total collapse because it is easier to rebuild from nothing than to change
billions of minds not even remotely concerned with the looming catastrophe. A
minority of the world, the 6 percent called America, suffers the mass
self-delusion of endless plentitude. A much larger portion is less concerned
with the moral aspects of consumption because they are brutally engaged in
trying to find enough to eat and a drink of clean water. So plentitude on any
terms looks damned good. Escape to America because those fuckers over there
don’t seem to be suffering at all.
Manifesto ofthe damned
I thank the stars for younger men, writers such as Derrick
Jensen and Charles Eisenstein. They say what we cannot yet say to ourselves and
what the media will never say because media survives by the corporate numbers
game. Consequently, the iron rules of being allowed to communicate with
significant numbers of people within our empire tend to call for glibness, fake
optimism, and the wide net of inclusion of even the silliest sorts of people.
Fuck only knows I’ve participated in the sham over the years. But the truth is
never politically or socially correct.
What’s left of my own aging hippie optimism dies hard. And
as an older guy who has seen both interior and external horror in this life, I
often assure those who will deal with this world after I am worm chow that “to
have seen a specter is not everything.” I’ve often repeated this theme because
it is important to know that many more specters lie ahead of the next generation,
the survivors of which will be the new “brave happy few,” links in the chain of
reason tempered with art. No one yet knows with absolute certainty the outcome
of our terrible common plunge toward truth. But even in the worst of times,
there is glory in the sheer electricity of life, the expression of its
juiciness, those moments when the eternal fecundity of the flesh struts by in a
tight skirt, or perhaps sporting the perfect unshaven jaw, offering everything
and nothing. Life is never completely joyless.
Younger men and women will live to rule or rule the day. So
seize it for god sake! And listen to the cellular wisdom of the flesh. I did
and do and am damned glad of it. Despite what a police court Jehova, Yahweh or
Allah may have told us, the only holy thing existent is this the flesh in which
we now walk. It leads us toward both good and evil, but it leads, and most
probably will bleed if we are on the right path. Yet, what could be better than
a meaningful life during meaningless times? Which is everything, whether we be
artistic, queer, altruistic, an unheralded ox in the fields of labor . . . or
one of the invisible ones out there with a stone cold determination to kill the
supposedly deathless machinery in which we are expected to supplicate daily and
call that a life.
I am not a wise man, but I dare say that’s about all you can
hope for. A splash of small glory, or perhaps even a canteen filled with
meaningfulness in the desert. It is no small thing.
So here we are. You and me. Let us hang all our laundry out
to dry in this tiny corner of cyberspace. I think it is entirely possible that
we can be honest cybernetic bards in an unpromising age, possibly even noble
amid the ruins.
Copyright © 2007 Joe Bageant
Joe Bageant is the author of the newly released Random
House book, Deer
Hunting with Jesus: Dispatches from America's Class War
,
about working class America. A complete archive of his online work, along with
the thoughts of many working Americans on the subject of class may be found at joebageant.com. Feel free to contact him
at: joebageant@joebageant.com.