by Jack » Wed 26 Jul 2006, 15:22:54
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', '
')Just because it's inevitable doesn't mean that it's not tragic.
Some day, Jack will die.
Now stop laughing and cheering. You know that's not nice.
It is inevitable - but tragic? No, it is simply the way things are. Perhaps, if some belief systems are correct, it's a good thing. Or perhaps the grave leads nowhere but oblivion. But whatever the case, it is and it cannot be changed.
Among animals - cute animals with fluffy coats and big brown eyes - we see death and dieoff. It is the way things are - hard coded into the genetics of the animals and the reality of the world.
And with humans - we war. We have killed and do kill - and will kill - for any number of reasons. Sometimes, for no reason. It is in us and part of us. It has ever been thus. So long as human beings are human, it will continue.
Perhaps the most amusing part of the whole situation is the emotional loading. Suppose I say:
Yesterday, in country X, 10,000 people died. Many of them were children. Some were infants in the arms of their mothers.
I then go on to say:
What a terrible tragedy! How awful! Oh, the poor children. I grieve for them. My heart bleeds for them.
Nonsense, isn't it? I don't know them. Their life or death gains me nothing - nor does it cost me anything. Perhaps I feel such emotions, but one must ask what they are based upon.
Or, I might say:
Hey, that's great! They deserved it! Too bad is wasn't three times as many. Yay! Whoopee! Kewl!
The emotional response (assuming it to be sincere) is, again, purest nonsense. Once again, there is no basis for such emotions.
As I asked at the beginning - if people are so sensitive, so delicate, that they rage at one another over present events, then what will they do when real death and destruction strikes?
Something to ponder between handfulls of popcorn.
Care for some? It really is quite a show.
