The
turbulent times are upon us and I can no longer determine if it is a crisis of
confidence, a run on the bank, a recession, a depression or a simple slowdown.
People of all colours and fields have been using such terms to try and pinpoint
the truth and magnitude of our global situation. Some have paralleled events,
describing links between tragedies. The tragedy in Iraq as a link to the
financial collapse of America, the Twin Towers as the price paid for years of
external aggression by imperial power, but truly I wonder if these are outdated
approaches to understanding the true state of the world. I question whether the
coming generations, those who one day will take the reigns of the world, will
be so obtuse in their understanding of a simple equation which is clearly
imbalanced.
I wonder if
the new visionaries of the world, the vanguard which is obviously still
gestating (metaphorically speaking), will continue developing on our warped
ideal of a world with fake democracies, phoney altruistic wars, and unsustainable
lifestyles. Or whether they will contemplate the world in a holistic way,
understanding that those big problems which we are obviously facing, may have
really simple answers. Answers which could prove difficult, but which
nevertheless at this stage of the game are worth serious consideration.
At a time
when mortgage lenders, construction companies, banks and many other businesses
are simply collapsing, when a large quantity of the global population is
suffering under atrocious inhumane conditions, and the environment is being
punished at a pace never seen before, it seems like the right time for thinking
outside the box. Obviously global leaders are not doing so. If they were, they
would all be apologizing to their people and to the world. Conflicts between
nations would be resolved, the whole world would disarm, and the global
population would set to work in providing solutions to the tragic reality which
we are already facing. But these words belong to the vanguard, and the sad
truth of the vanguard is that it must coexist with the existing frame of
collective thought, until events unfold which force the majority to some kind
of global collective action. That will still take some time, but there have
been events creeping up which show us that the masses are not yet fully asleep.
It is true that nowadays it is easier to see a collective of people united
behind a football team, than behind an altruistic cause, but the importance is
that the collective element is still present and within it lies the path to an
alternative global reality. That in itself is worth exploration.
As the time
for serious introspection arises, it is necessary for humanity to determine how
to treat those politicians who have lied to their people, to decide what course
of action to take towards those military generals who have participated and
promoted wars which were clearly unjustified. It is also unavoidable to face
the honest moral dilemma of what to do with those bankers, businessmen and
lawyers who have used their knowledge of the law and their understanding of the
markets to bankrupt whole nations bringing their populations to their knees,
but one must never fall into the simplistic vision of a world were a few bad
apples have spoiled the game for the rest of humanity.
Humanity
must punish those who promoted and capitalised on this adventure we have
embarked on; this adventure of the promotion of peace and prosperity while
undergoing a process of war and misery, but unless we have genuinely opposed it
with all our might, we must understand that we are also responsible. Let us
punish and let us repent, but more importantly, let us change. The absurdity of
it all is that it is all incredibly elementary, yet we seem determined to
continue complicating matters further with the metaphysical goal of sustaining
an unsustainable situation, which is crushing all those ideals we all seemed to
be fighting for. I wonder if humanity is preparing itself for a second chance
at Plato’s Allegory of the Cave,
in which this time the chained prisoner after breaking lose and seeing the sun,
is able to go back into the cave and convince his fellow prisoners of an
alternate reality.
Pablo Ouziel is a sociologist and freelance
writer.