Hope for the
Future
Most people recognize that we have serious problems right now,
such as pollution, over-population, loss of bio-diversity, urban sprawl, poverty, murder,
crime, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. However, while there has been much public
hand-wringing and political rhetoric, when it comes to actually understanding the ultimate
origin of these problems there has been a roaring silence. You'll hear the usual hollow
remedies - we must build more prisons to reduce crime, grow more food to combat hunger,
more development to alleviate poverty, new government programs and laws to clean up
pollution, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera. But didn't we DO all of those things last year,
the year before that, the year before that, and haven't our politicians and leaders been
promising to do even more NEXT year, the year after that, the year after that, until some
glorious future when all our problems will be magically solved? Seriously, how many of you
really believe that - and be honest! Haven't these problems always been with us, and don't
our religions tell us that it's our fate to live lives of suffering until we obtain
salvation? The subliminal message whispered in the background noise of our culture is that
humanity is inherently flawed, we are poison to the Earth, we always have been and always
will be.
Well, we could easily answer all of those questions but unfortunately
we've forgotten the answers. This is crucial - it's not that we never knew the
answers, we've forgotten the answers and we've forgotten even where to look to find
the answers. In fact, it's such a stupendous piece of self-delusion that it has been
called The Great Forgetting. We look at our beliefs and the way we live now and say
humanity has always been this way, humanity will always be this way, this is the way it
was meant to be. But guess what - it's a lie. It's not true. It's not true in so many ways
it's actually laughable. I'm here to tell you that humanity has not always been this way,
humanity doesn't always have to be this way, this is not the way it was meant to be.
Part of the problem is that we of this culture have a skewed sense of what is
old. We look back a hundred years and think wow, that's old - we're much different
now then we were back then. We look back five hundred years and think wow, that's
really old - I barely recognize those people. We look back a thousand years and
think my god, that's incredibly old - nothing that happened then could possibly
have any relevance now. But yet it's not true - a thousand years is not actually a very
long time, compared to the age of humanity. Last year Edge asked the question
"What is the most important invention in the past two thousand years?" and many
important people came up with some very impressive sounding answers. (http://www.edge.org/documents/Invention.html) Marvin Minsky said it
was the foundations in chemistry, Joseph Traub said the scientific method, Colin Blakemore
said the contraceptive pill, Freeman Dyson said hay, Charles Simonyi said public key
encryption, V.S. Ramachandra said the place-holder 0, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera.
However, a geoarchaeologist named Eberhard Zangger came up with a very interesting answer:
"Since the principle factors controlling people's lives today already existed 2000
years ago, the skeptic in me would intuitively vote for: nothing worth
mentioning." He went on to say "If we take a stroll through a Roman town
2000 years ago — and ancient Pompeii provides a good example of a city frozen in a moment
of every day life — we would find a city containing factories (including one for fish
sauce), public baths, athletic stadiums, theaters, plastered roads, proper sidewalks, pubs
and, inevitably, brothels — facilities for people who were, for the most part, in better
physical shape than us." Think about this for a second - the people two-thousand
years ago were just like us. They looked the same, had the same needs and desires,
the same institutions, thought processes and guess what - the same problems too. They also
had slavery, crime, pollution, war, murder, problems with government, over-population, and
so on. Socrates was executed in fifth-century B.C. Athens on the trumped-up charge of
"corrupting the youth", the same charge we now level against video games and
popular music today.
You're probably wondering why I've dragged you back
two-thousand years - to summarize, the same problems we're experiencing now have been with
us for thousands of years but are much magnified now because our population is so much
larger. So if we're going to find answers we need to look back further in time, starting
at a time before we had these problems and then moving forward until we start to encounter
them. Why? Because we don't have a hope of solving our problems until we understand how
they came about in the first place. Unfortunately up until now we've been like a football
official standing on the one-yard line, staring intently at the ground. We've scrutinized
every square inch of ground from the one-yard line to the goal, but we've completely
ignored the previous ninety-nine yards on the field. We just wave our hands dismissively
and say "Oh, nothing that happened there has any relevance to me."
As I alluded to before, a couple of thousand years is not really a long time,
compared with the age of humanity. Modern humans showed up over a hundred thousand years
ago, and humanity's direct ancestors have been around for a million years. So here
is an interesting question: Did people a hundred thousand years ago experience the same
problems that we do today, and have been experiencing for the last few thousand years? The
answer, as you would expect, is an emphatic No! So what happened? How did we get from
there to where we are today? Well, focus your attention on the area between the Tigris and
the Euphrates rivers about ten-thousand years ago and you'll find a small group of people
living in a profoundly unique way. You'll probably dimly remember from your early
schooling that something important happened there, and that it had something to do with
the birth of agriculture. Well, that's not quite right - agriculture with a small
'a' had been around for millennia in the form of people supplementing their diets by
promoting the growth of their favorite foods. But this was Agriculture with a capital 'A'
- full-time farming as a way of life. But yet it was even more than that, because those
people underwent what we now call a paradigm shift - they started out in one frame of mind
and ended up radically different. They don't seem different to us because we are them -
their beliefs are our beliefs. If you don't believe me, here is an example. You may not
agree with the following statement but I'm 100% certain that you've heard it before, and
you'd agree that many, many people do believe it: "The world was meant for
Man, and it's Man's duty to conquer and rule it." That one simple statement
epitomizes the central pillar of our culture, and it was invented by those people living
in the fertile crescent ten-thousand years ago. No-one before them believed that
statement, no-one around them believed it, but they did and took it to heart, and
that made all the difference.
What made their revolution Agriculture with a
capital 'A' was that it was totalitarian agriculture - they believed that they were not
just a member in the Community of Life but that the Community of Life served them.
Any plant or animal that was useful to them was promoted and allowed to live, and plants
or animals that harmed them or their food were labeled pests or weeds and were hunted down
and destroyed. While many of you are probably shaking your heads in agreement, I can't
stress enough that this way of thinking was different, new, unique and ... dangerous.
Dangerous because it provided something never before seen - food surpluses, enormous,
incredible, empowering amounts of food. Before Agriculture the amount of game a tribe
could catch and the food plants it could raise limited its population - you can't create
people out of thin air, you need to have food first before you can create more people. But
Agriculture freed a tribe from that restraint by re-shaping land that had been home to an
incredibly diverse ecology into a factory for producing one thing - human food. The more
food available the more people you can create - many, many more people than could
ordinarily have been supported. And so the first "modern" problem appeared -
over-population. Totalitarian Agriculture is a hard, back-breaking, toilsome profession so
those people ten-thousand years ago also invented the concept of work. The
nine-to-five day was completely unknown before - previously the food was all around and
all you had to do was reach out and catch it. But now you had one class of people toiling
on the land, and a whole other group of people living off their labors. So how do you
convince one group to transfer food to the others? Why, you need money and barter, which
leads to jobs, products, markets, towns, cities, governments, haves and have-nots.
Something else those people invented is famine - everything is fine and dandy when
the rains fall and the sun shines, but how do you feed all those extra people when the
rain doesn't fall and the sun doesn't shine? You don't, and they starve. What a
bargain!
So, to pull the various threads together, humanity was not born a
full-time agricultural, city-building people destined to subdue and rule the world. For
tens of thousands of years humanity lived as yet one member of a Community of Life
and lived as harmlessly as any other creature in a uniquely human lifestyle. One single
culture ten-thousand years ago decided to try living in a different way, just as an
experiment. Unfortunately the food surpluses generated by that experiment allowed that
single culture to expand and consume nearly all other cultures until it became a single
obscene global entity that is busily going about its duty of harnessing the entire
biosphere for human food and needs. And it will continue on until either we eliminate so
many species that the whole system collapses or people stand up and say Enough! We finally
realize that we can't go on creating more food surpluses because the only result is more
people. We now see that our one insane culture is not humanity and that humans have
lived and a very small percentage are still living in ways that aren't poisonous or
dangerous to the world. We now understand that humanity is not inherently flawed
and we were not destined to a life of suffering with our only reward occurring in an
after-life.
This is but one small corner of the entire mosaic that
describes us - who we are, where we came from and what we desperately need. If
you're still with me, know that there is more, much more than can be contained in one
letter. Please, go to your library or local bookstore and find some of the books written
by Daniel Quinn - Ishmael, The Story of B, My Ishmael, to learn
more. His website address is: http://www.ishmael.com/real-welcome.cfm
And no, this isn't advocating that we immediately give up
everything we have and are doing now. But we have to understand how we got here and the
important things we're now lacking before we can come up with any meaningful solutions to
our problems. In the meantime, please forward this letter to as many people as you can -
our problems can only ultimately be solved by people with changed minds and a new
vision.