by Aaron » Tue 12 Jul 2005, 10:30:35
Before I get to that...
A friend recently commented to me about how Americans who travel abroad seem to have a unique attitude about the experience than travelers from other countries.
He said that to him, it seemed like the Americans around us, (we were on a scuba vacation), treated their surroundings as if they were in an amusement park back home. You know these places where each section of the park has some "theme" like WildWestLand, or Cartoonville etc...
Like their predisposed disposition was to regard the country they are visiting as a section of some amusement park.
"Welcome to MexicoLand!"
"Gee mom... everything is SO authentic!" "It's amazing! How do they do that?"
What's funny is that I began to notice visitors from other countries with similar predispositions. Like the Japanese tourists were walking around like the place was a museum. Our Canadian neighbors milling around like they didn't really think they should be there & would be asked to leave any moment. Cool Italians in their tiny suits, sipping espresso and looking for all the world like they were sitting back home. Aloof Israelis always sectioning themselves off from the crowd, in a kind of cultural quarantine. And the Australians with the easy smiles & friendly outgoing natures walking freely among every group without seeming to notice.
What's really uncomfortable, is despite being aware of this, I still find myself viewing the world through American colored glasses.
And then I was reminded that people like the folks in here, are actively redesigning that paradigm by interacting in new & interesting ways.
Dissolving geographic boundaries, defying conventions & norms, and creating a new world view impossible before the Internet.
I'm wondering about the downstream effects of this unprecedented melting pot experiment.
Like the way the Open Source revolution is force-feeding the business world a new model through the fiat of international consensus.
Open Source is a simple idea that has changed the face of software development and integration. It's basically an unaffiliated group of technologists around the world, who volunteer the time and skill to contribute to building & maintaining software which is license free for everyone.
Everything we use here, (almost), is Open Source. From the web server OS, to the bulletin board, email server, even live Voice/IP, it's all Open Source.
As you can imagine, there are many businesses who are not thrilled by this development, since they sell competing products. And some have even taken the attitude, if ya can't beat em... join em, and actually sponsor Open Source projects. (HP, IBM etc...)
Could this same idea work in other areas of human endeavor?
If we had enough people around the world who participated, could we force-feed common solutions down TPTB's throats?
Even if they don't like it? (Perhaps especially if they don't like it?)
hmmmm....
--------------------------------------------------
Oh yeah... the point of this thread... lol
I was watching a small piece on cleaning Mt Rushmore, and I wondered if some ancient Egyptian had stood beneath the Sphinx, and wondered what future people might think of what they had made?
Did our theoretical ancient observer entertain even for a moment, the possibility that his whole civilization would decline & collapse many times during the long years between now and then?
And that some people like ourselves would dig & sort through their ruins, trying to understand who they were?
So of course I wondered what some future observer would make of Mt Rushmore? New York? Or Stone Mt Georgia?
Kinda humbling...
The problem is, of course, that not only is economics bankrupt, but it has always been nothing more than politics in disguise... economics is a form of brain damage.
Hazel Henderson