Waking up
By Pablo Ouziel
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jun 30, 2009, 00:24
We wake up
in the morning to hear and watch the newest tragedy that has swept the attention
of the world’s media.
One morning
it is the tragic crash of an airplane, the next some contested elections that
turn violent as people rebel. Soon, the media lens is directed to the death of
a star, but after a few days, the media bites ease and as a few specialized
commentators continue discussing previous events, cameras and microphones have
gone somewhere else. Amidst this media frenzy, the future of the world is being
orchestrated as attentive spectators watch in silence and (sometimes)
disbelief.
Serious
events and acts are taking place everyday which merit serious social debate,
yet because of the fact that our societies are deeply fragmented, broken and
clashing with each other, we are unable to grant ourselves the necessary pause,
required for conciliation and unity. Because of this, we are easy to control as
a mass of isolated individuals, which is held together by norms and
regulations, bureaucracies, military, and police, and concepts such as the
nation-state, the church and the corporation. If we stay in this model of
society, I fear we will live in perpetual war until we destroy ourselves by not
paying attention to the fact that something is drastically wrong.
We are
living in societies plagued with corruption at all levels, we are constantly
expanding our militarized societies surveilled by police forces and colonizing
armies, which are rapidly eroding our freedoms. In the meantime, the resources
of the world are generating massive amounts of wealth for a small minority, as
our natural heritage is being rapidly dilapidated. In exchange, the majority of
the global population receives what we have come to identify as ‘security,’
when in effect, it could be clearly labelled as racketeering. As a collective,
the mass of the population gets terrorized and soon succumbs to authoritarian
rule.
In the
Western world -- the bastion of democracy -- we console ourselves with the
thought that we are free, we refer to ourselves as members of the free world
and compare our free societies with tyrannies that govern in other parts of the
planet. This we justify by the fact that our elected officials have reached the
podium through an electoral system of some kind, thus, in effect, being
representatives of our interests as citizens. It can be argued that this is a
fair assumption, as long as we conduct our field research in a laboratory, but
if we engage with members of the numerous sub-communities, which exist within
the boundaries of delineated nation-states, we quickly realize that there is
tremendous discontent and frustration brewing amongst the population. At the
same time, there exists in our societies a sense of impotence and fear that if
the boat is rocked, things will get worse.
As the
world globalizes on different planes -- intellectually, spiritually, socially,
politically, economically and militarily, to name a few -- we are faced with the
realization of the global consequences of our actions, or our inactions. At
this point, all we can do is practice the great and often forgotten virtues of
just analysis, honest critique and self-amelioration, hoping to contribute
something of value to the global village. Without these virtues, we fall into
the trap of blaming others for our barbarous crimes.
When
starving kids in poorer nations are dying and have no access to food or water,
we blame the country’s tribal lords and corrupt politicians, we forget to
mention the exploitation and extortion carried out by our corporations with the
aid of our governments and laws.
When we go
to war, we blame tyrannical leaders for forcing us to attack them -- we unload
bombs on civilian populations in the name of preemptive strikes and the defence
of freedom. We forget to question whether we have become monsters and have lost
all sense of reason.
When our
free-market banking system collapses and our politicians tell us that
institutions are too-big-to-fail and must
be bailed out by the taxpayers, we are quick to accept their jittery
explanations and swiftly approve their actions. We forget to wonder whether we
are being conned.
Finally,
when a surveillance society rises from within our democratic communities and
our freedoms are radically eroded, engrossed in our own delusion of freedom, we
forget to evaluate whether we are still living in democratic states, or have
transcended into something different.
It is this
lack of questioning which has paralyzed us as a collective-mass, and keeps us
extracted from the true decision making process -- the one that defines our
present global reality and is shaping the future we will leave for others to
inherit.
Although I
believe professor Chomsky is right in advocating that “prediction in human
affairs is a very uncertain enterprise,” I think it is safe to predict, that
tomorrow we will wake up in the morning and the media will be playing out the
show of the day, perhaps it will report on North Korean bombs, street fights in
Iran, the failing state of California, the Madoff financial scandal, or the
bombings in Iraq, Pakistan and Afghanistan, amidst millions of other news
stories, which will navigate through our systems of communication mobilizing us
in one direction or another.
It is also
safe to predict, that unless there is a drastic change in the will and choice
of the majority, at most tomorrow, we can expect isolated demonstrations making
isolated requests: stop the war in Gaza, fight for gay rights, defend freedom
of speech in Iran, or save the polar bear.
We are
still far from defending a globally united cause for environmental
sustainability and continuity, equality, freedom and justice for all, a fair
system of distribution, and an end to oppression and war. If we can one day
unite under that banner, all together at the same time, prolonging our request,
popular uprisings in Iran, in Gaza, Iraq and Afghanistan will inspire us all
and we will unite under the same cause. If this happens, together we will break
our chains from the elite that govern us, and bridge the abyss, which has
separated us from each other.
A brilliant
man I know once told me, that despite what we are told, human beings are not
too different from each other. I believe he is right, but we must wake up in
order to understand this.
Pablo Ouziel is a
sociologist and freelance writer based in Spain.
Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor