by Pops » Mon 25 Apr 2005, 20:26:00
It seems a thread about the great changes has turned back to a thread about how to shoehorn the new to the existing.
A “job” is the existing and not very old way of thinking. “Jobs” haven’t been around long; crafts, trades, livelihoods, yes – jobs, no.
As well the thinking that “we can change the world”.
No you can’t! Why are you avoiding changing what you can and getting used to what you can’t?
I haven’t watched Dr. Phil but I’m sure he would say to a beleaguered wife, “You can’t change him, you can only change yourself!”
If a wife can’t change a husband, how are “we” going to change “society”?
My point is simply that before wealth and power (that reads; subjugation) and long before cheap energy replaced subjugation - at least overtly, mankind was concerned with one thing: survival.
Oh yea, and procreation. In fact subjugation, wealth and power are all extrapolations of survival and procreation.
So the truly great ideas our civilization is based on had to do with better ways to survive and hence procreate. The end result of better ways to survive and procreate is TWAWKI.
I’m not disparaging the accomplishments of various societies by any means – I enjoy as many as I can afford. My question is more too individual responsibility for societies perpetuation. I propose that endless ruminations on the problems with society are but an attempt to ameliorate our personal responsibility for the one thing we are ultimately responsible for – the survival of our offspring.
The discussions of long range planning, societal reconstruction, entropy, inertia and all the rest of the big picture diversions will be as knowledge of stadium football statistics when your “job” is but a footnote in an unwritten history text, your home is a mud-lined culvert and your hungry child asks, “When you were talking about all this bad stuff happening to the world, why weren’t you doing something to keep this from happening to me?”
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)