by Kent » Tue 09 Aug 2005, 12:15:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'W')hat creeps me out the most is that so many people just expect or assume "the government will take care of it." Why are people so in love with the government? Are they children who need Daddy to take care of them?
Unfortunately, yes. While almost everyone matures physically, and a great many mentally, most people remain emotional children to one degree or another. Part of this is human nature - people refuse to grow up and take responsibility for their own lives. It's too much work...too serious...a real buzz kill. It's like we spend 9 months getting out of the womb and then another 65+ years trying to crawl back into it. We'd much rather believe in Santa Claus, the tooth fairy, or a Jesus who comes down to earth and does all the hard work for us (just say the magic words, "I accept you" and BINGO....immortality is yours). We'd also much rather believe an image of our goverment as a wise and beneficent father figure who ultimately has our best interests in mind.
This belief/need is really just an extension of human-kind's most fundamental dynamic which is the tendency for people to seek pleasure and avoid pain. Being your OWN parent means taking responsibility for yourself....responsibility means work....and work often means accepting a certain level of pain.
But the other half of the equation is the government's ENCOURAGEMENT of this kind of parent/child relationship with it's built-in dependency and sense of helplessness. Think about it. Is our education system reallyset up to teach kids how to think for themselves, encourage individual self-expression and learn how to be self-sufficient? Or is it a group-think mentality that pushes standardized testing and encourages concepts like "teamwork and school spirit" along with a rigorous adherence to a broad set of
system-imposed rules.
People WANT to stay children (or think they do). Our government and/or religions simply serve as the surrogate parents people long for in their life-long attempt to avoid the responsibility of becoming an adult. Unfortunately, most people will continue to believe that "daddy" will take care of them long after he's gone on a drinking binge, spent the family savings and gambled away their entire inheritance.
There shall in that time be rumors of things going astray, and nobody will know where lieth those little things with the sort of raffia-work base, that has an attachment, seen only just the night before, about eight O'clock --Boring Prophet, Life of Brian