by Hermes » Sun 26 Mar 2006, 01:00:42
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('weirdo27', 'I')m just saying what if the downfall of society never happens for like...?
And what if it's already started? What if, 50 years from now, peoples' collectively accepted understanding of history points to 2003 as the beginning of the downfall? Or 1997? Or earlier perhaps?
And how can we pinpoint the downfall? Will it be an insane week that finds the stock market crashing, tidal waves enveloping island nations, flu pandemics and concentration camps being set up? Or will it be a slow erosion of things that a simple-minded and miopic populace never sees as the downfall of society?
When will the Holywood music kick in, and the sky darken, and the NY Times' headlines tell us "The End Is Nigh"?
Never, of course.
I look around and see the end of modern society coming already. I see it economically. I see it socially. I see it politically. I see it ecologically. I see it spiritually. To my eyes the downfall HAS BEGUN.
I don't see the relevant question as: 'what if the downfall of modern society doesn't happen'. I see the relevant question as: 'how is the current disintegration of our modern society going to play out?'.
To view it as a process that has begun, and is potentially gradual but often manifests itself in periodic cataclysmic events, and will have often times that it seems like modern society has a chance of holding on to things, but viewed from a macro level it's clear that modern society is steadily slipping into the abyss... I think that viewing the downfall in these terms may be more helpful than viewing it as one clear event.
I don't think that there is ever going to be a clear 'end' to it, perhaps not even a clear beginning to the 'end'.
How did the Roman Empire end? From what I learned, it sputtered a bit, faltered here and there, shrunk, shrunk, shrunk... and then what? Who was there to proclaim it dead? We can look at it a millenium and a half later and pinpoint this or that event... but back at that time what did the layperson see from their perspective?
I imagine that throughout this whole ending process they had great parades and festivals celebrating how unstoppable the Roman empire was, and how it'd continue forever. I furthermore imagine that the people of the Roman empire didn't talk of things like whether or not the empire was ending. They probably talked about all the minor setbacks their army was having here and there, and complained of the worsening of the economy... but of course it'd always get better right? Because the Roman Empire is unstoppable, right?
But I think that's what the downfall of a society looks like.
"
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.
"
T.S.Elliot