The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

Deserve: the deadliest word

I hate the word “deserve” because lord save us all from what we “deserve”, but lately I find it hard to remember that one good person is worth saving, or that most people are just weak, not evil.  The world will burn, in war, and famine, and revolution, and climate change and it will burn because we are so contemptible we refuse to do anything to stop it from burning. And maybe that we now includes me, but I’m so very tired of dealing with stupid, cruel, selfish people.  Heck, forget selfish, people who won’t even look out after their own self-interest, or even understand what it is.

I fear I’ve come full circle.  As a teenager, subject to constant cruelty, I hated humanity.  Contemptible.  The human love of cruelty was clear to me, the way we encourage it, the way we nurture it, the way we inculate it.  The way group dynamics require scapegraces and outsiders, the way most people, to feel good about themselves, like to watch others squirm, how they enjoy tormenting the weak, how they secure their own position in whatever little pack they belong to by showing that someone is below them.  They make those people into something less than human, or worse, the truly evil know they’re human and derive pleasure from the ability to inflict and relieve suffering as they choose.

As I grew older, I learned how to defend myself, learned how to make those who would hurt me, hurt instead, so they would find their prey elsewhere, would prove their place in the hierarchy by humiliating someone else.  And I learned that some people are good, that some people will do the right thing even when there’s nothing in it for them.  I learned, also, that most people are of weak character.  In their weakness they will do what they think the group approves of. A few good leaders I saw made of those around them good people, by expecting nothing less.  Oh, the pettiness never goes away, but the deeper cruelty was not tolerated, and it was not tolerated by even the lower ranking members of the packs, for so they had been trained, so it was expected, and they knew that disapproval would come from the pack, and the Alpha, for cruelty, not kindness.

But we have selected, to rule our societies, sociopaths at best and psychopaths at worse.  They have contempt for those they rule, do not see them as even truly human, and enjoy hurting them.  They feel tough when they make the hard decisions, which are somehow always hard for others, but never for themselves.  They encourage cruelty in society, from the ground up, and routinely subject the population to humiliating surveillance, force them to abase themselves to the least appearance of authority, whether legitimately used or not, and condone murder and torture and routine humiliation.  They don’t do these things to themselves, of course, the rich, for example, don’t get groped in airports, but they routinely do it to those below them.

And in so doing they teach those below them, to do it to those below them, and below them, and below them, and so on.  The sickness comes from the top, a rotten poison which has altered the character of nations.  But it came from the bottom, first.  It came from a population who became lazy and complacent and thought they had rights they didn’t have to guard like a dog with a bone; who thought they could just live their lives and leave politics to other people except for pulling a lever or marking a ballot every four years.  It came from people who felt “I’ve got mine, who cares what happens to anyone I don’t know?”   Unable to see themselves in others for longer than the gossamer blink of an eye, they were also unable to understand that what was done to others would also be done to them.

We have become contemptible.  Our leaders, perhaps, are most contemptible of all, but we continue to consent. Oh perhaps polls might say we’re not happy, but who cares what polls say?  We do nothing, we let our leaders do as they will, and we take on their mores, becoming cruel and debased and uncaring of what happens to our fellows, not even the care of enlightened self interest, the clear understanding that what is done unfairly, cruely, to someone else, could, probably will, one day be done to us.  We pretend to care most about our children, making such a fetish of it that allowing children to roam unattended is virtually treated as a crime, yet we are creating a world in which they will suffer, unimaginably, a world in which hundreds of millions, perhaps billions, of our grandchildren will die.

Lord save us from what we deserve, because what we deserve is what’s going to happen: war and revolution, famine and drought, climate change on a scale we truly don’t understand.

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93 Comments

  1. beowulf

    “I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that his justice cannot sleep forever.”
    Thomas Jefferson

  2. It boils down to this question: would you rather have justice or mercy?

  3. Suspenders

    Maybe we should stop expecting so much from our fellow hairless apes.

  4. Don Pushies

    Yes, all true … I vacillate between despair. anger, and “fuck it” … but, if we can emerge from the Dark Ages we can emerge from the coming devastation … centuries later, of course …

  5. StewartM

    A well-written, thoughtful, post.

    I agree yet disagree. I believe we’re akin to bonobos, so that sociality and compassion and empathy are born into us. However, for due to reasons of humankind’s cultural evolution I won’t go into (which largely involves the development of war and economic inequality) human societies indoctrinate youngsters into believing that down is up, war is peace, and slavery is freedom. Always at a cost, to be sure, to themselves as individuals and to society at a large, but to a benefit to the few at the top.

    Heck, forget selfish, people who won’t even look out after their own self-interest, or even understand what it is.

    Much of the difference in what people think of as evil and good is the difference between short-term and long-term self-interest. One of the attractive things about hunter-gatherer societies is that essentially all their social relations are long-term. You’re in contact with these people for life; so if you cheat them, defraud them, or lie to them the truth about you becomes known and you suffer the penalties for doing so. In “advanced” cultures short-term relations abound, and a type of social distance is introduced. A thief who robs someone, or a con artist who defrauds someone, can usually count on never having to meet with them again or have to deal with the consequences of his misdeeds. In short: in hunter-gatherer societies good behavior is rewarded because it is obviously “rational” for reasons of self-interest, in “advanced” cultures evil behavior is often rewarded because, in the short term at least, it too seems “rational” (though in the long term, it’s not really as there are adverse long-term consequences).

    The supremacy of capitalism as the world’s only economic system for “serious” thinkers is the reason we’re in this mess. Capitalism, as its propagandists like to tell us, is “good” because it breeds insecurity–even if you’re at the top, you can’t rest on your laurels. But what does insecurity breed? Why, short-term thinking behavior! When you don’t know if or where your next meal is coming from, you eat your seed corn, for what matters *now* is more important than what could happen in some far-distant future. And as I said above, much short-term thinking leads to evil behaviors: greedy, grasping, take-it-while-you-still-can behaviors?

    So–under capitalism–is it any wonder that we’re willing to destroy the planet for the sake of next quarter’s profit margin? Ian, you yourself wrote a very accurate blog on how companies today are “burning down the house” to make those profits. Why not the whole planet too?

    While acknowledging the achievements of FDR and others in that time: going back to the New Deal isn’t a solution. FDR *failed* because he tried to save capitalism. His patches on the capitalist system didn’t hold; progressive taxation was rolled back and regulations were peeled away, one by one. The problem with the New Deal was a belief that you could restrain the beast by caging it; but what history has shown is that the beast will break out of any cage you devise. You must kill the beast once and for all in order to progress.

    And to promote personal and social good, such an economic system must provide a high degree of security. When people are secure, when they know that today’s necessities will be met, then they are free to plan for the long term. When they plan for the long term, when their calculus for what they will do hinges on long-term consequences, then they act better both as individuals and as members of a larger society. What that system might look like is open to argument; my preferred system would entail a system of small privately owned mom-and-pop businesses and large worker-owned cooperatives where economics of scale dictate large size, as well as government-guaranteed necessities such as health care access, food, and shelter.
    But I don’t have all the answers on that, save to know that having great wealth (and hence great power) must be prevented.

    -StewartM

  6. I wish more folks these days would pay attention to the very simple lesson you note here: if it’s only hard for other people, it isn’t really a hard decision. Those words – “hard decision” – ought to be an alarm bell…..

  7. Albatross

    Bacteria placed in a petri dish will expand to consume all resources and then die of famine amidst their own wastes. The question for humanity is “Are we collectively any smarter than bacteria?” So far the answer is “no.”

  8. Morocco Bama

    If there is one more plague on Egypt, it is by your word
    that God will bring it. And there shall be so great a cry…..

    Good metaphor to support your point……

  9. Man, I feel this post. The contempt just circles out, out there, and winds back into the self, to self-contempt.

    What is it that is marked by this self-contempt? It is surely not innate or natural – I cannot conceive that we were thrown up by this Earth-organism, successfully at least until we became “clever,” as such contemptible creatures, but that may be merely a failure of my conceiving, my cleverness. One does not have to look far into Nature to see the hard and soft cruelties of the natural cycles of life…

    A fellow that I am reading at the moment is making a great case for the idea that post-Enlightenment social Darwinism has deeply, and intentionally, infected our education as children. Exacerbated by the appearance of ubiquitous fuel – coal and oil are seen as equalizers that encourage overproduction by the clever masses, thereby threatening the special place that elites enjoy as monopolizers of wealth.

    The hierarchical drone-ism that seems so innate in these times can arguably be seen as a direct consequence of this diabolical mis-education – perpetrated by social-engineers-with-means (the wealth class.) It is here that the author veers uncomfortably (for me) into Tea-Party territory – withdrawal from the social contract and homeschool the young ‘uns, among other righty-libertarian responses, these are the responses that are most easily within reach of shallow thinking, the sort of shallow thinking you would expect from we, the mis-educated.

    My point is here that when I look deep into my own self-contempt – which cannot be avoided if one is to fairly ponder the poor behavior of the species as a whole – I encounter certain knee-jerk impulses that actually feel quite alien to me. For example, I have spent my entire conscious life inculcating, and proselytizing at any opportunity, an independent view that holds that the Calvinistic imperative for work is a scam – yet it often takes an heroic effort to retain esteem in the face of unemployment.

    If a committed iconoclast like myself is still being jerked around by these, I can only imagine what it must be like for those of “weaker character,” as Ian puts it.

    I was about to write that maybe I’m wrong, and that’s why the guilt persists. But, goddammit, no. The guilt is testimony to the insidiousness of the propaganda. I think I can stand on that.

  10. Ian Welsh

    Every solution fails, Stewart. If we succeed, and we put in place a solution, it will fail. It will start to fail when the people who put it in place and understand it are no longer in power, and as even the memory fades even further, it will fade even further until it hits the point of crisis. The question is only how long any solution to human societal problems lasts. FDR didn’t fail, he did good. It was the responsibility of the genertations after him to keep his solution working. They failed, not him. No one can anticipate everything which will happen. FDR gave the US decades of prosperity.

    If you want to blame that generation, blame those after him, who understanding how dangerous the MI complex was, didn’t neuter it.

  11. jcapan

    “They don’t do these things to themselves, of course, the rich, for example, don’t get groped in airports, but they routinely do it to those below them.”

    Me focusing on one little tree, but how do they avoid the heavy petting?

  12. @jcapan:

    Private aircraft.

  13. Cloud

    Bacteria placed in a petri dish will expand to consume all resources and then die of famine amidst their own wastes. The question for humanity is “Are we collectively any smarter than bacteria?” So far the answer is “no.”

    Hey, stay out of my brain!

    [/desperate humor]

  14. jcapan

    Thanks Petro, that had escaped my not-rich brain. I was thinking in terms of the so-so rich/1st class types, though it wouldn’t surprise me if they had an out too.

  15. Ian Welsh

    Even flying first class you avoid the worst of it, I’m told, by a friend who does so.

  16. “Even flying first class you avoid the worst of it, I’m told, by a friend who does so.”

    Wow, Ian. If that doesn’t reveal the bankruptcy of the whole process… as if a serious actor couldn’t gather up the scratch for a first-class ticket.

  17. StewartM

    Ian Welsh:

    Every solution fails, Stewart. If we succeed, and we put in place a solution, it will fail.

    Even though I say “FDR’s solution ‘failed'”, I do recognize what FDR did accomplish and also recognize that he couldn’t have possibly known that his solutions would eventually fail.

    If you want to blame that generation, blame those after him, who understanding how dangerous the MI complex was, didn’t neuter it.

    As one of those who came after him–yes, but when was there another chance? The rollback on FDR’s policies started in the 1960s, just 20 years after his death, with the 1964 tax cut cutting the upper rate from 91 % down to 70% (most commentators seem to miss the connection that this was when the US started to have a persistent inflation problem…hmmm). This rollback was started by Democrats too. The pressure against the legacy of the New Deal was persistent, well-funded (of course), always from a rightward direction, and even came from Democrats like JFK and Carter. The liberals’ battle to keep the New Deal reforms in place was always a rearguard action after the 1960s; they never had the power to mount any offensive to expand it.

    But today? We have the perspective of history. We know something that FDR did not know. That is, the beast will not stay caged. You can reinforce the cage or build a new one and eventually it’s going to break out again. Killing it is the only solution I see that has hope for long-term success. I am reminded of a quote from the Lord of the Rings (pardon me for this outburst of nerdiness) which says that one shouldn’t go for the temporary fix when one knows what the permanent fix is.

    The perspective of history also shows that our opportunities to actually advance progressive causes are few and far between, so we have to accomplish the most we can the few times we have those opportunities. The problem is, it is my sinking feeling is that we already had our best chance–or, namely Obama did, and he royally flubbed it, not even willing to just repeat what FDR did (if he ever was of the mind to attempt it) let alone to try more.

    -StewartM

  18. anon2525

    Too bad for us that we don’t have more Naders and that he has gotten old. Ralph Nader from the Truthdig link cited above:

    “Seven hundred thousand people demonstrated in London. But where are they the next day? And where are their adversaries? The next day their adversaries are on the job. Where are the 700,000 people? They are out of there. How many organizers are on the ground in the 435 districts? Could labor unions have been organized without organizers? Could the suffragist movement have been organized without organizers? Could the anti-slavery movement or the civil rights movement been organized without organizers? If you don’t have organizers on the ground you know ipso facto that your demonstration is going nowhere.”

    And they announce “one-day protest”, “two-day strike”, and so on. Strikes have worked when the strikers said, “We will strike until our demands are met,” not “We will strike for a day to ‘send a message’.”

  19. Starbuck

    Well, FDR did it to himself and us by bargaining away the chance to nail down the capitalist juggernaut that sought to push for fascism. To save The New Deal, he saw to it that the leaders of that movement would not have to stand trial for treason for continuing to support Hitler after war was declared. He did it to get Wall St. off his back and stopped their attacks on his plans.

    The seed for contempt of the law was planted, and the fruits are bearing down on the rest of us.

    Ian, this post needs wide circulation. Thank you for writing it.

  20. skuppers

    @jcapan
    “Me focusing on one little tree, but how do they avoid the heavy petting?”

    Not heavy petting, but somewhat similar…. During the 2001 hoof-n-mouth scare, my wife and I were on a flight from Calcutta to London. We were flying club class on British Airways – we were up in the ‘bubble’ of a 747. After they closed the doors, the aircrew announced that they were going to go throughout the plane and ‘spray’ everyone to guard against the disease being carried to England. I thought “oh fucking great!” So we waited to be sprayed but no one ever came up to the bubble. We could hear them spraying below; even smell the spray – it smelled like the Raid ™ I used to spray flies with when I was a kid, but we never got sprayed. So that, more or less, is how the moneyed classes avoid the shit through which the rest of us have to wade; they buy their way out of it.

  21. Formerly T-Bear

    Two teams of words, ‘don’t know’ and ‘don’t care’ are paired horses also in that race for deadliest words, crowd pleasers they when the two teams are harnessed together, a foursome drawing some splendid carriage of thoughtlessness.

    Nota bene: Beware of using ‘historical information’ and ‘historical conclusions’ being published by the ilk of Forbes publishing conglomerate (now American Heritage Publishing). All too often “American Heritage” magazine produces tracts better described as ‘free market propaganda and disinformation’. Reflections of this alteration of historical information and the conclusions drawn from that information are appearing in the comments here, notably in reference to Civil War era assumption of intents and inferences used to substantiate present day ideologies and conditions. So too with the Great Depression era, those who witnessed and given voice to that experience are long gone and can no longer tend to tilling the weeds of imagination, ignorance and supposition from the reality of that garden of change. At risk, becoming blinded to fact by the glittering delusion of history; more bright shinny where fact wears the patina of long use.

    Many comments being made seem to overlook the basics of human behaviour, that of dominance within the social group. Decades have passed since Desmond Morris wrote about “The Naked Ape” followed by other sociological studies of dominance characteristics, the ‘Alpha male/female’ of humans and other related species. Occam’s razor works wonders in trimming away the dross of flabby prejudices that are so in stylish vogue. So much to know, so complex, so little time to learn, so much effort to clear the mind of the detritus of simple, facile answers.

    Both culture and civilization are but thin veneer to hide the underlaying animal, sometimes either is not capable the task, sometimes either is a self-imposed delusion.

  22. StewartM

    Formerly T-Bear

    All too often “American Heritage” magazine produces tracts better described as ‘free market propaganda and disinformation’.

    History is not, as Henry Ford said, “bunk”. But history, like art, is at best a perspective limited by the available data and widely-held beliefs of the time of authorship; at worst out-and-out propaganda in the service of a political cause. The historiography of, say war guilt in WWI or the US Civil War, are good examples of this. In fact, WWI and its outcome influenced Civil War historiography for the next two decades. One sees the past in reference to one’s present.

    Many comments being made seem to overlook the basics of human behaviour, that of dominance within the social group. Decades have passed since Desmond Morris wrote about “The Naked Ape” followed by other sociological studies of dominance characteristics, the ‘Alpha male/female’ of humans and other related species.

    If I am understanding you aright–uh, no.

    Humans have no alpha males and females. Late-surviving hunter-gathering groups which have been studied do not support that contention. Or, as Marvin Harris put it (Our Kind):

    “Then let me hear no more of our kind’s natural necessity to form hierarchical groups. An observer viewing human society shortly after cultural takeoff would easily have concluded that our species was destined to be irredeemably egalitarian except for distinctions of sex and age. That someday the world would be divided into aristocrats and commoners, masters and slaves, billionaires and beggars would have seemed wholly contrary to human nature as evidenced in the affairs of every human society then on earth”.

    Hunter-gatherers do have leaders, “headmen”, and often more than one, but it’s a thankless job. You get the status by merit; by repeated examples that you’re good at what you do and know what you’re talking about. Even then, you issue no direct orders and lead by example and by platitude. Even if you’re the hunter who brought in the kill, you shrug and say you were lucky instead of boasting about it (boasting being bad form in egalitarian societies) and you might have to eat last after everyone else has eaten. You’re often the first one up in the morning to make the fire, if there’s a job to be done you’re the first one to pitch in and to start doing it. Their job has been compared to being an overzealous scoutmaster at an overnight campout.

    A better explanation than biological rationales for human leadership roles then is a desire for status and acceptance, which overlaps with our need to be loved. In hunter-gatherer cultures, status can only be gained by showing that you merit it; there is a tight connection between responsibility and what little ‘power’ you wield. After the Neolithic threshold was crossed, and the switch to more settled, horticultural lives made it possible for “big men” to increase productivity by getting others to work hard along with them so that they could play the role of “great providers” (but still at no tangible benefit to themselves) they at least got to brag about their status. With “chiefs”, the position starts to be more managerial and possibly hereditary and the lifestyle of the “chief” begins to become elevated above those of commoners (though still, little in the way of direct power). But still, the job of all of these was to provide materially for their peoples, and woe could befall any that didn’t live up to his job.

    As people don’t willingly surrender their autonomy, the transition from chiefdom to state with its kings, emperors, and pharaohs required a particular set of circumstances. One, it required storable wealth–in the form of a crop that could be stored. This meant that some people, by hard work or good fortune, could accumulate wealth and become richer than others. For hunter-gatherers, with no storable wealth, one’s associates are one’s “bank account”–you do good for them with the expectation that when you need help, they will likewise do for you. While no tallies are kept, one “banks” against a “rainy day” by doing helping others. The growth of inequality in wealth and was an important development, as it grants one independence from the necessity to do good to others.

    A key requirement was water. The first “pristine” states evolved where agriculture was facilitated by irrigation. Having storable wealth meant, over time, that rich people could become “chiefs”, and becoming the chief meant, among other things, managing the water supply. As population density increased, eventually such areas could not be productive *without* irrigation, and then the chief by managing the precious water become the arbiter of life and death itself. Their supply or storable wealth in turn allowed them to hire thugs (ur, “armies” and “police”) both for self-defense and to control the locals. Contributions became taxes, and chiefs became kings. Eventually, in all the areas this occurred (Mesopotamia, China, Egypt, India, and Peru) the life-and-death power over water allowed the kings to become emperors, divine beings on earth who demanded worship and that commoners grovel on the ground abjectly before them. Statehood changed religion too, alleviating the leader from any responsibility for providing for his people in the here-and-now (which is something that every head man, big man, and chief had to worry about) and transferring rewards into an afterlife.

    As for the commoners? As disastrous was this turn of events for them, they couldn’t run away–their population had increased to the point that the surrounding, less hospitable, countryside could not support them. They were trapped–hence the term: “hydraulic trap”, coined by Karl Wittfogel. This also explains why any pharaoh-wannabees among the chiefs of say Germany or Scotland or Saskatchewan or elsewhere failed–their agriculture wasn’t irrigation-based, and no one controls rainfall. Hawaii is an interesting test case, there its pharaoh-wannabees had many of the prerequisites but lacked among other things, storable crops. Their staple, yams, wouldn’t keep more than a few months, which meant that pre-European Hawaiian states were always unstable and fell apart.

    The reason for this long explanation is this: if the biological explanations of human inequality were correct, if we were truly a species of alpha males and alpha females, then you’d expect the Hanna-Barbera cartoon image of prehistory that many of us grew up with to be correct: that of a chief in a grass skirt, advised by his witch doctor sporting a bone through his nose and flanked by his warriors, with the commoners groveling before him, exercising arbitrary life-or-death decisions over his people and whose word was law. But the reality is that you see nothing of the sort; the opposite, in fact. Hunter-gatherers are not led by Hitlers or Stalins or Henry VIIIs or Qin Shi Huangdis. Not only are their overzealous scoutmasters unlike them, people who behave like these–grasping sociopaths who life is all take and no give–run into trouble in their cultures and are even killed as “crazy people”. I suspect that a tendency towards sociopathy and dominance might be to some degree inheritable, but it is a tendency only rewarded in derived cultures, not basal ones.

    The myth of the human alpha male/alpha female is instead a creation by derived cultures themselves. Cultures who give most of their people a raw deal also create mystified creation stories to explain how reality came to be, in which the message is “This is the best deal you can hope for, no better deal is even possible. Live with it”. Likewise, the sociopaths who came to lead derived cultures were all-too-eager to embrace biological explanations for inequality and that gosh by golly, *someone* is “naturally” destine to be in charge and wielding the iron fist (so why not them?). In the West until relatively recently the bias has been to disparage primitive cultures as being brutish tyrannical hellholes (Hobbes, Hegel) and that instead the uh, the apogee of liberty was to be found in Hegel’s Prussian state.

    It wasn’t until the colonial period, when commoners sometimes ran away to live with Native American peoples did some learn the truth: instead of a society where by law how long they should take at meals, what clothes they could and couldn’t wear, how long they should work, what time they should get out of bed, and the smallest choices of conscience and sexuality were tightly controlled by some Lord Asshole; they discovered a society where by contrast the personal freedom and autonomy were unparalleled to anything they had known and the work requirements were minimal. You can almost imagine their reactions in today’s vernacular: “Wow. Awesome”. It’s why the English in the early colonial period were alarmed at the prospect of their indentured servants running away into the woods and “going Indian” and why they killed any whom they caught doing so (which in turn is also why they eventually turned to a system of African slavery vs white indentured servitude). Even then, some scholars like Bruce Johansen maintain that Europeans did not have any idea of what a free society might look like until they contacted Native American peoples, and that these influenced Enlightenment ideas and those of American thinkers.

    Finally, even in biology, if one wants to draw on primate models–bonobos don’t have alpha males. Alpha females, perhaps, but not alpha males. Most of the work detailing “alpha” status is done on less closely related species to us, and I believe the reason why for this too is influenced by our cultural biases. It’s like sexuality: Disney shows us that footage of pairs of birds-mated-for life taking care of their offspring and there’s of course The March of the Penguins, meanwhile ignoring the bonobos over there having the orgy. They do this even though we and bonobos uniquely share key similarities related to sex while we and those other species share almost nothing in common. Our cultural mores about “how life oughta be” doesn’t fit well with bonobos for those desiring naturalistic explanations of human inequality and current society, so they’re less utilized.

    -StewartM

  23. Formerly T-Bear

    @StewartM

    Finding another opinion to support one’s opinion still will not convert that opinion to fact. After perusing about a quarter or your extensive tract, I was unable to discern anything but opinion well disguised as massive verbiage; not sure the rest is worth the bother, would doubt your credentials non-the-less – other than your right to have an opinion. Sorry you have gone to such great lengths for nothing. Sorry all that is a fail.

  24. Morocco Bama

    would doubt your credentials non-the-less

    I doubt all credentials. They speak nothing of effectiveness, or accuracy. Credentials amount to nothing more than one’s fellow backslappers heaping praise and recognition for both bolstering the Orthodoxy and presenting the proper social/political etiquette….meaning not rocking the boat and tipping the apple cart.

  25. @StewartM

    With all due respect to T-Bear – who, by my lights, is an otherwise awesome contributor to this thread – that is my take on the state of humanity as well. Admittedly, I’m a lowly autodidact like Ian, but my less-than-scholarly research supports much of what you say.

    The egalitarian lessons of the early N.A. settlers did indeed make Western “society” apoplectic, and there is evidence that actions were taken by those with concentrated wealth to not let the genie get too far out of the bottle. I would cite the text that I am currently reading, but I may have some problems with its overall thesis – I am waiting until I am through, and it is digested. I plan on writing a full review/critique over at my place at that point.

    On sociopathy – there is little evidence of heredity for this condition (which neither helps nor hurts your observations, BTW.) I have a strong suspicion that the current concentration of sociopaths (estimated at an astonishing 5%) is indeed symptomatic of our unnatural human arrangements. The inherent distance between us in “civilized” society both cripples the effective social responses you cited and, quite possibly, encourages the appearance of such a condition. Like autism.

  26. Ian Welsh

    Stewart seems to be primarily running with the “wet” hypothesis, which centers civilization around irrigation. However, there is also the dry hypothesis, which finds civilization occuring in places without irrigation.

    Both are likely correct, as an aside.

    Ancient Mesopotamian societies, especially in the couple thousand years after the younger Dryas, were theocracies. They formed theocracies to do virtually everything and ran almost everything, including a very sophisticated financial systems (with usurious 30% interest). One Babylonian creation was the 7 year debt forgiveness, which given 30% interest, is pretty much required.

    Humans are remarkably plastic, really. Weak, if you will. But once they have a way of doing things, they hate to change it. Usually a once very succesful culture won’t change until forced to, either by full on collapse or by a barbarian invasion, or both.

  27. Everythjngs Jake

    So the NEA voted yesterday to endorse the Obama campaign. Reportedly, they wanted to be on board early with their support. Apparently those who voted nae just sought to delay the endorsement to send Obama a message (which would basically be, don’t worry, we’ll scold you, but you have nothing to really fear from us).

    Barely four months have passed since Obama spit in the face of labor during the protests in Wisconsin. Not only did he (the first among lying sociopaths) fail to don his promised walking shoes and join the picket line, an “angry” White House actually countermanded the national Democratic Party’s initial support for the protests, even though that “support” was tepid at best. Chris Hedges’ observation that we are a deeply illusioned culture is spot on. It’s like watching a victim of domestic violence claim my partner didn’t mean it, I know s/he loves me.

    They say you cannot help an addict until they are ready to help themselves. Unfortunately, there’s no detaching from the self-destructive impulse here, (without absolving the “dealers”) no escaping the scale of misery that will result from those who continue to “use.”

    “Lord save us” seems about right to me; at least something on the order of a miracle will be required for our redemption.

  28. Morocco Bama

    Does anyone have a link to the transcripts of the interviews with our Hunter-Gatherer ancestors where they tell us about their Egalitarianism?

  29. Ian, I greatly respect your writings, which I have only recently been exposed to. I urge you to keep writing, and yet I urge you to do more. I too have been wondering if any real human progress (not tech, human thinking) has been made in 100 years. I wrote the following poem inspired by your first paragraph, which I’ll let stand for my current state too. (I’ll finish my thoughts below the poem.)

    Title = I Am Good No

    Lord help us
    But it appears
    I am
    The one last good person

    I am good no
    (Albeit wavering)

    Suppose I should stand up more
    But who am I to decry that mankind
    Has chosen weakness over goodness
    The common good is no longer common
    Or very good
    Why should that bother me
    It is their fate
    Not mine

    I am good no
    (Albeit wavering)

    As you can tell by my simple words
    I cannot stand up to them
    They are too many
    They are too strong
    They will ignore me
    Or worse

    Still I am good no
    (Albeit wavering)

    Can I not persuade you of this
    And then
    When you step up
    I can follow you
    As you stand up to them
    As you take on their evil
    I can stand behind you
    Support you from right here

    So I am good no
    (Albeit wavering)

    You are better than I
    You can do more
    I am but a crazy poet
    Still I can stand behind you
    It is up to you it seems
    But do not worry
    I have your back

    After all
    I am
    The one last good person
    I am good no.
    – – –

    Poem ended, let me close by saying we both need to continue to step up, to try to take on more while preserving our goodness. Maybe we never rise above teacher or worker, but maybe we can rise into business owner or school principal/chancellor, or maybe we end up in public service or even a political leader.

    Whatever our fate, regardless of any religious basis, we need to do our best to be good; and we need to do so knowing our humanity will cause us weak moments, even mistakes where we were bad. It is a sad state of being human, but we need to forgive ourselves, seek guidance from other good people, repair our selves and if possible repair any damage we caused.

    The point being, if enough Mikes and Ians and anyone else reading this do so, we will create the communities we want to live in. And maybe if enough people create enough goodness, we can leave behind a place our children can continue to improve.

  30. BDBlue

    I both agree and disagree. It’s true that humans have not acquitted themselves very well on a grand scale and, yes, most of us are weak.

    Having said that, I know a lot of people who are inherently decent. Take my family (not me). The part in rural Appalachia during the depression. Didn’t have two dimes to rub together. But pretty much anyone who stopped by their little patch of dirt got fed. It’s why there’s a mural over the fireplace – an artist wanted to “pay” them. I am constantly astounded by acts of decency and kindness routinely. People going out of their way to help others in small and large ways. A colleague who gave up part of his liver so someone else might live, for example.

    My own theory is that our society has advanced in ways we aren’t really capable of dealing with. It’s evolved faster than we have. The effect modern day propaganda has on us is, I suspect, both deeper and something we don’t really understand or process in a rational way.

    We live in a huge corporate state and we’re not really equipped to maneuver within it in positive ways. For example, I’ve known quite a few relatively high executives at federal agencies and departments. The number who don’t seem to understand the politics around them is actually quite large. Only a few truly see the bigger game. Most are just trying to do their jobs and go home to their families. And, of course, those out to corrupt the system take advantage of those things.

    Add to that a centuries old effort to marginalize and disenfranchise people, which never seem to go away. From ballot access laws to voter registration restrictions, the country is designed to keep people from participating in a meaningful way. Yes, people could rise up and fight that, but there’s a lot of pressure not to from debt slavery to employer background checks. Not an excuse so much as an explanation.

    So I’d say we both do and don’t deserve what we’re getting. Or rather those who deserve it least will get hit the hardest. Those who deserve it most will not.

  31. BDBlue

    I should’ve added that I don’t consider myself among those who deserve it least. I’d say that I’m in the middle. Not one of the truly bad actors and I generally do the right thing and not just follow the leader, but I’m also certainly someone who could be doing more in a positive way.

  32. Deserve

    “Night after night, I sat there dreaming. Dreaming when I would be inside – getting ready. I was alone. I don’t like to be with people – and I can never stand any kind of fighting.

    “One night when I was going home, I saw two men fighting. They were drunk. I can’t stand people who are drunk! One was big and the other little. The big man was hurting the little one. I went up and pulled on the big man’s sleeve. Asked him why he was doing it. He looked down on me. I was eight years old.

    “That’s all right. You can go now. Here’s your little daughter.’ Then I ran away. I wasn’t his little daughter.

    “It’s just the same today. If I see an accident or hear two people quarrelling, I am just sick all over. I never fight myself and I won’t do any fighting in pictures.

    http://www.greta-garbo.de/interview-with-greta-garbo-photoplay-1928-ruth-biery/index.html

    (FRIENDLY ACTION) ESCALATION OF FORCE RPT %%%/A–%%% AFAR IVO (ROUTE ): %%% CIV WIA

    WHEN: 011430JAN09

    TIMELINE:

    %%%: UNIT WAS CONDUCTING MOVEMENT FROM CP %%% TO %%% WHEN A FEMALE LN WALKED IN BETWEEN THE FIRST AND SECOND MRAP. THE %%% MRAP INITIATED EOF PROCEDURES BY YELLING AND USING HAND AND ARM SIGNALS TO ATTEMPT TO GET A LN WOMAN ( %%%) TO MOVE OUT OF THE ROAD.

    THE WOMAN BEGAN PRAYING IN THE MIDDLE OF THE ROAD, AND THE %%% AT HER TO DEMONSTRATE HIS INTENTION TO USE DEADLY FORCE.

    THE WOMAN CONTINUED TO MOVE TOWARD THE VEHICLE AND IT CONTINUED TO BACK UP. THE PL RADIOED FORWARD TO THE LEAD VEHICLE THAT WAS NEAR AN ISF CHECKPOINT, VIC THE INTERSECTION OF RTE %%% AND RTE %%%, TO GET THE %%% TO ATTEMPT TO COMMUNICATE WITH THE WOMAN. THE IPS ATTEMPTED TO GET THE WOMAN OUT OF THE MIDDLE OF THE STREET. SHE REFUSED TO COMMUNICATE WITH THE IPS, AND BEGAN YELLING LOUDER. THE IP MOVED AWAY FROM THE WOMAN TO INCREASE STANDOFF.

    THE ELEMENT ATTEMPTED TO GET ASSISTANCE FROM %%% WHO WERE AT THE CHECKPOINT AND THEY STAYED AT THE CP. AFTER THE IP MOVED TO COVER BEHIND THEIR VEHICLE, THE WOMAN THEN BEGAN MOVING TOWARD VEHICLE TWO AGAIN, ALL THE WHILE THE CREW WAS GOING THROUGH EOF PROCEDURES, WHEN SHE GOT APPROXIMATELY %%% AWAY FROM THE VEHICLE THE PL ORDERED THE %%% THE WOMAN WITH HIS %%% AS THE LAST STEP IN THE ESCALATION OF FORCE. THE ELEMENT DETERMINED BASED ON TERRAIN AND CLOSE VIC OF %%%, THERE WAS NOT A SAFE AREA TO FIRE A WARNING SHOT. AT THIS TIME THE %%% LN FEMALE SUSPECTED OF BEING A SUICIDE BOMBER WITH %%% X ROUNDS OF .%%% FROM HIS %%%, RESULTING IN %%% X LN WIA.

    AFTER THE WOMAN WAS ENGAGED, THE IP IMMEDIATELY PICKED HER UP AND PUT HER IN THEIR VEHICLE. THE ELEMENT ATTEMPTED TO STOP THE IPS THROUGH VOICE COMMANDS TO DETERMINE IF THERE WERE EXPLOSIVES ON HER OR ANYTHING ELSE SUSPICIOUS. THE IPS DID NOT STOP AND DEPARTED THE AREA QUICKLY WITH THE WOMAN. AFTER FURTHER INVESTIGATION THE WOMAN WAS TAKEN TO THE %%% HOSPITAL BY THE %%%. CURRENTLY %%% AND %%%/A ARE CONTINUING TO INVESTIGATE, IN ORDER TO LOCATE THE WOMAN AND DETERMINE IF SHE IN FACT HAD ANY EXPLOSIVES ON HER PERSON.

    THE A BTRY COMMANDER IS CURRENTLY AT THE %%% HOSPITAL , GRID %%%, WHERE SHE IS BEING REPORTED TO HAVE BEEN TAKEN TO. SHE IS REPORTEDLY A %%% FOR THE %%% STATION. HER NAME IS . %%% REPORTED AS HAVING SURGERY TO REMOVE HER LEFT KIDNEY AND IS IN STABLE POSITION.

    THE BN COMMANDER,%%%, IS WORKING WITH THE %%% BN COMMANDER AT THE %%% AT JSS .

    %%%: PER PHONE CONVERSATION /%%% AT JSS %%%-THE %%% DIV CDR CAME TO JSS %%% AND RELAYED THAT HE WENT TO THE %%% HOSPITAL TO QUESTION THE WOMAN. THE %%% DIV CDR STATED THE WOMAN WAS INTENDING ON COMMITTING SUICIDE BY JUMPING OFF THE BRIDGE WHEN SHE RAN %%% THE CF PATROL. UNDERSTANDING OUR EOF PROCEDURES, SHE THEN TOOK THE ACTIONS STATED EARLIER WITH THE INTENT OF GETTING SHOT. %%% DIV CDR %%% THE EOF AND STATED THAT THE PLT %%% DID THE RIGHT THING. THE IP DIV CDR STATED THAT HE WOULD ALSO GO TO THE MEDIA TO CLEAR THE STORY UP. NEXT %%% IS ATTEMPTING TO GET WOUNDED LN TO %%% CSH IN THE IZ FOR BETTER TREATMENT.

    SUMMARY:

    %%% X EOF
    %%% X LN WIA
    %%% X DMG

    //CLOSED//%%%

    http://wikileaks.org/id/92C2418B-423D-4561-53D7A158D5B5C640/

    We asked Oucha Mbarbk what he would do if he had more money. He said he would buy more food. Then we asked him what he would do if he had even more money. He said he would buy better-tasting food. We were starting to feel very bad for him and his family, when we noticed the TV and other high-tech gadgets. Why had he bought all these things if he felt the family did not have enough to eat? He laughed, and said, “Oh, but television is more important than food!”

    http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/04/25/more_than_1_billion_people_are_hungry_in_the_world?page=full

    http://pastebin.com/Q86Zhgs9

  33. @ StewartM

    Much of the difference in what people think of as evil and good is the difference between short-term and long-term self-interest. One of the attractive things about hunter-gatherer societies is that essentially all their social relations are long-term.

    In economic terms, people realize they are providing surplus value/product, and they hope this excess will magically find its way to people who need it. However, it does not. Therefore, society should discourage people from providing this surplus value if they are not willing to do the work of directing where it should go by their own efforts. http://pastebin.com/Q86Zhgs9

  34. “For example, I have spent my entire conscious life inculcating, and proselytizing at any opportunity, an independent view that holds that the Calvinistic imperative for work is a scam – yet it often takes an heroic effort to retain esteem in the face of unemployment.”

    Low demand for countersignalling. http://zhongwe2.serverpros.com/cs/

    Anyway, for the third time in this thread, solution is here: http://pastebin.com/Q86Zhgs9

  35. Oh, and I hate spamming comments, but many people who don’t work feel exactly the same way even if they have millions of dollars. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0342143/

    But there’s not much you can, is there eh! When even McDonald’s gets 20 times the number of job slots in applications for a national hiring event…

  36. Great post. No false hope here. Just the bitterness and the rage, which everyone should feel but so few sadly do.

  37. Rob Grigjanis

    We have become contemptible.

    Presumptuous bastard. When weren’t we?

  38. @ StewartM

    with the 1964 tax cut cutting the upper rate from 91 % down to 70% (most commentators seem to miss the connection that this was when the US started to have a persistent inflation problem…hmmm).

    84% of the general public thinks inflation is bad. Only 18% of economists think the same way.

    Then again, mainstream economics has no logical explanation for why people earn money, and then proceed to not spend it when they have more money than they could ever conceivably spend on daily needs. The use of wealth as a standard of success means that possessing money has utility regardless of the ability to exchange that money for products and services, but also means that productivity increases will lead to depressions and unemployment when people who have money stop spending it, due to oversupply of labour. In other words, by fixing unemployment there is no longer any need for continuous inflation to ensure a society’s economic health. http://pastebin.com/Q86Zhgs9

    @ Formerly T-Bear

    Many comments being made seem to overlook the basics of human behaviour, that of dominance within the social group.

    This comment does not overlook that aspect.

    The desire to achieve can be harnessed for positive change, by defining standards of achievement that benefit society.

    @StewartM

    Eventually, in all the areas this occurred (Mesopotamia, China, Egypt, India, and Peru) the life-and-death power over water allowed the kings to become emperors, divine beings on earth who demanded worship and that commoners grovel on the ground abjectly before them.

    One emperor of China changed his name to make it easier for people to comply with a naming taboo.

    Hunter-gatherers are not led by Hitlers or Stalins or Henry VIIIs or Qin Shi Huangdis. Not only are their overzealous scoutmasters unlike them, people who behave like these–grasping sociopaths who life is all take and no give–run into trouble in their cultures and are even killed as “crazy people”.

    It hardly needs to be said that the areas that hunter-gatherer cultures were in were invaded and colonized by people from more complex societies, not the other way around. Perhaps they would have benefited from having more “crazy people”, after all.

    Disney shows us that footage of pairs of birds-mated-for life taking care of their offspring and there’s of course The March of the Penguins, meanwhile ignoring the bonobos over there having the orgy. … Our cultural mores about “how life oughta be” doesn’t fit well with bonobos for those desiring naturalistic explanations of human inequality and current society, so they’re less utilized.

    Why do you have an expectation that TV programs about nature describe any kind of objectives of a human society? Or TV programs about anything for that matter?

    @The Other Mike

    The common good is no longer common
    Or very good

    If the US’s GDP goes up, is that good?

    If the US’s consumption of oil goes up, is that good?
    http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/ene_oil_con_tho_bar_dai-oil-consumption-thousand-barrels-daily

  39. Ian Welsh

    General decline doesn’t really show up unequivocally till about 75. There is no evidence that inflation below double digits has any negative effect on general wages, and some reason to believe that too little inflation hurts wage earners.

  40. It hardly needs to be said that the areas that hunter-gatherer cultures were in were invaded and colonized by people from more complex societies, not the other way around. Perhaps they would have benefited from having more “crazy people”, after all.

    “Benefited,” indeed. Perhaps humanity is one, and there are larger, epochal, lessons to be learned. Time will tell, I’m sure – I only hope that someone will still be listening…

  41. Fascinating thread, this.

  42. General Washington

    Well Ian, take comfort in two possible outcomes to this nearly complete failure of a species.

    Either the rather more egalitarian and “just” societies (usually, as already noted, taking the form of the “hunter-gatherer” type) will survive the sins of the complex “civilizations”, assuming any have survived the arrival of the complex “civilizations” to date.

    Or, regardless of any esteem Homo Sapiens holds itself in, the Earth itself will survive just fine sans Humanity – much less with or without its current menagerie of species – and in due time some other intelligence will arise to take the vacated pedestal of supremacy tens/hundreds of millions of years from now.

    Quite likely to learn some lesson from the ruins and bones we leave behind.

  43. Quite likely to learn some lesson from the ruins and bones we leave behind.

    Hey! I’ma ‘spectin’ dem bones myself! 🙂

  44. Celsius 233

    General Washington PERMALINK
    July 6, 2011
    Quite likely to learn some lesson from the ruins and bones we leave behind.
    ===================================
    Hmm, there is scant evidence to support that assumption/conclusion. We’ve done this too many times in our short history and the outcome is always the same; fail.
    However, your second surmise is the only reasonable eventuality; Gaia will of course continue to it’s natural conclusion without us. Or, IMO, at least a minuscule remnant of the remaining hominids…

  45. Formerly T-Bear

    @ 233ºC

    The species you indicate can’t learn from books, how do you expect them to make the quantum jump to bones, you need read books before bones. Dante’s “Abandon all hope, you who enter” inscription at the entrance to Hell works well here as well. The record will be read by unknown others … or not at all.

    thanks for your remarks.

  46. Morocco Bama

    The desire to achieve can be harnessed for positive change, by defining standards of achievement that benefit society.

    Who gets to do the defining? Therein lies the rub.

  47. Morocco Bama

    Quite likely to learn some lesson from the ruins and bones we leave behind.

    If that were indeed possible, and I’m not saying it isn’t, there would be nothing left of “us” or “our” vaunted Civilization. However, this much is for certain. Since all life, and non-life, is cut from the same molecular cloth, it goes without saying that any future intelligent life will be comprised of any previous “intelligent” life, and in that sense, life and non-life alike can never fully escape its past.

    I believe it is hubris to portend that intelligent life could not have existed prior to human and early human. The Earth has been around a long time and gone through a myriad of “earth-shattering” changes. Those drastic upheavals erased any archaeological evidence that may have existed from potential previous intelligent non-human life…..leaving only the molecular elements for the next manifestation.

  48. Morocco Bama

    Fuck reading books and bones. Read the tea leaves. It ain’t a pretty story.

  49. StewartM

    Morocco Bama:

    Does anyone have a link to the transcripts of the interviews with our Hunter-Gatherer ancestors where they tell us about their Egalitarianism?

    Richard Lee’s works are a good start.

    -StewartM

  50. StewartM

    Misaki:

    It hardly needs to be said that the areas that hunter-gatherer cultures were in were invaded and colonized by people from more complex societies, not the other way around.

    That’s purely due to demographics. Hunter-gathering cultures can only exist at very low population densities: << 1 person a square mile. Once a neighbor, any neighbor, passes the Neolithic threshold, their population density explodes. That means: 1) they can't go back to being hunter-gatherers, for sheer numbers plus as agriculture requires driving away game and involves simplifying the ecosystem; and 2) they will either subsume or drive away any hunting-gathering neighbors. It's why the hunting-gathering cultures that survived long enough to be studied all lived on rather poor pieces of real estate that no one else fancied.

    Even that being the case, those same studies showed that hunter-gatherers "worked" only a fraction of what even Westerners work, let alone Third-World sweatshop workers: about 15-20 hours a week doing "work" and about an equivalent additional time doing "chores". They are the kings of leisure time. In fact, it's something of a mystery what drove people to start agriculture and animal husbandry in the first place; hunter-gatherers aren't stupid, they know damn well that if you plant seeds in the ground plants will sprout. "But why should we?" they would respond to questions about farming. "Isn't that a lot of hard work?"

    Perhaps they would have benefited from having more “crazy people”, after all.

    First of all: most hunter-gatherer groups that lasted long enough to be studied did practice some sort of intergroup conflict or “war”. Now, some caveats need to to be said right away: their “wars” are low-intensity conflicts , sometimes even just single homicides, and sometimes more symbolic than bloody. (One described instance from Australian aborigines: both sides met on a prearranged field, with men shouting insults at each other and detailing their grievances, while old men threw spears at each other at very long range, during which old women ran amongst their own men screaming at them to behave. When someone was finally hit by the rather inaccurate spear throwing, everything ceased, as if a reaction of “OMG someone actually got hurt!”). Moreover, such a “war” might not involve all the members of either group; one could sit out the “war” and still be friendly with people on the other side; indeed, you might have family on the other side. While the percentages of adult male combat deaths due to “war” could be rather high (c. 25 %) the low population densities meant that this would translate to be on the order of about one death every 10 years per band from “war”.

    However, most groups studied did fight “wars” and there were casualties and deaths. That needs to be said. So despite not having Hitlers and Stalins and Pol Pots, they know how to fight and to defend themselves if the need arose.

    I could add more, but I got burned on a long comment before so I’ll stop.

    -StewartM

  51. StewartM

    Misaki:

    Why do you have an expectation that TV programs about nature describe any kind of objectives of a human society? Or TV programs about anything for that matter?

    I used these as an example because everyone has seen them [Disney nature specials] and can relate. But even in scholarly articles, you see the same crap, only somewhat more refined: searching nature for naturalistic explanations of human behavior of our society, ignoring the fact that our society’s behaviors aren’t universal AND that the species being used as an analogue is not closely related to us at all. One can’t help but conclude this is just searching for a naturalistic window-dressing for today’s society, including our inequalities and injustices.
    Alpha males and females, “rapist” baboons, mated-for life birds, the list goes on and on.

    I’m not saying that naturalistic explanations are never warranted: far from it. But they should focus on the behaviors of species closely, not distantly, related to us, and must encompass and explain (or at least not conflict with) the wide variety of human behaviors observed. That means knowing a bit about human history, prehistory, and ethnography. And no, Stephen Pinker, not the Flintstones version of it.

    -StewartM

  52. StewartM

    Ian Welsh

    But once they have a way of doing things, they hate to change it. Usually a once very succesful culture won’t change until forced to, either by full on collapse or by a barbarian invasion, or both.

    Interestingly enough, said resistance to change seems to correlate with social stratification and hierarchy. Hunter-gatherers and other band-and-village people are open to change when they control it and see it improving their lives. They will adopt using modern tools instead of handmade ones, or sport baseball caps and T-shirts. (Although the sad story of the obliteration of cultures on my continent and elsewhere often starts with such ‘gifts’, even those well-meant, that result in the peoples forgetting how to make the tools their ancestors did, and becoming dependent on the outsiders).

    Hierarchical societies, controlled by those on top, fear change, because any change will likely decrease their wealth and power and comfort. In previous blogs you’ve nailed it spot-on: our elites are stuck on the oil economy, it’s just been too damn good to them, and all its associated aspects such as climate change. The only change they would allow is a change towards another energy source they can likewise control, top-down, to continue to be able to charge the serfs a monthly fee.

    Plus many of them are aging. I had a Rush Limbaugh fan who complained about the guv’mint taking his “hard earned money” (actually, he walked down a church aisle to obtain that) admit to me in a moment of honesty that all he cared for was to keep taxes on himself as low as possible until he died. After that, he didn’t care.

    (And conservatives maintain that homosexuality is “dangerous” because gays don’t have children and therefore don’t have any posterity to worry about?)

    -StewartM

  53. StewartM

    Formerly T-Bear:

    Finding another opinion to support one’s opinion still will not convert that opinion to fact. After perusing about a quarter or your extensive tract, I was unable to discern anything but opinion well disguised as massive verbiage; not sure the rest is worth the bother, would doubt your credentials non-the-less – other than your right to have an opinion.

    My credentials? “Well-read” on many topics, including this one, though I can’t claim professional status. (Not that it matters, what matters is the argument, not who speaks it).

    But as you didn’t read it all, here is the summary:

    The reason for this long explanation is this: if the biological explanations of human inequality were correct, if we were truly a species of alpha males and alpha females, then you’d expect the Hanna-Barbera cartoon image of prehistory that many of us grew up with to be correct: that of a chief in a grass skirt, advised by his witch doctor sporting a bone through his nose and flanked by his warriors, with the commoners groveling before him, exercising arbitrary life-or-death decisions over his people and whose word was law. But the reality is that you see nothing of the sort; the opposite, in fact. Hunter-gatherers are not led by Hitlers or Stalins or Henry VIIIs or Qin Shi Huangdis. Not only are their overzealous scoutmasters unlike them, people who behave like these–grasping sociopaths who life is all take and no give–run into trouble in their cultures and are even killed as “crazy people”.

    If one accepts that the hunter-gatherer society to be the only one that has lasted long enough to influence human biological evolution, then the notion that we are a species of alpha males and females is therefore almost provably false. The peoples you’d expect to exhibit it most in fact don’t; they exhibit it least.

    The rest of the post was to demonstrate that 1) the development of inequality of wealth and power, of social systems containing ‘alpha males’ and ‘alpha females’ is perfectly and plausibly explained via human cultural evolution, not biological pedigree; and 2) despite it almost being provably false, biological explanations of social inequality because of ‘alpha males’ and ‘alpha females’ will be nonetheless touted because these are comforting to our elites. Just like they have in the past and present favored biological explanations that white people are “better” than brown ones, or that men are “better” in some ways than women, or that rich people are smarter than poor ones. None of those biological rationales survive rigorous scrutiny either, but that scarcely stopped anyone.

    -StewartM

  54. Morocco Bama

    Stewart, your theory, or the theory to which you adhere, is extremely plausible, but that does not make it fact. We cannot extrapolate from now back to the entirety of human history based off of what we only see and know now. Or, more specifically, we could certainly attempt to do so, and that is what you are doing, but with what degree of accuracy? Granted, your theory is very well reasoned, but well reasoned doesn’t make it right.

    It’s precisely why I said let me see the links to the interviews with some of the 100,000 year old humans so we can see just what type of social arrangement they were exercising. Absent that, much of this is well reasoned conjecture, and what irks me about well reasoned conjectured is the air of authority it carries when it has no basis to wield such authority and more than the Pope has any business wielding Authority about the question of God and Divinity.

  55. orange

    “1) the development of inequality of wealth and power, of social systems containing ‘alpha males’ and ‘alpha females’ is perfectly and plausibly explained via human cultural evolution, not biological pedigree; and 2) despite it almost being provably false, biological explanations of social inequality because of ‘alpha males’ and ‘alpha females’ will be nonetheless touted because these are comforting to our elites. Just like they have in the past and present favored biological explanations that white people are “better” than brown ones, or that men are “better” in some ways than women, or that rich people are smarter than poor ones. None of those biological rationales survive rigorous scrutiny either, but that scarcely stopped anyone.”

    Care to define the alpha male and alpha female for us Stewart? Are not some women born beautiful and others ugly? Are not some men born stronger or more intelligent than others? Is this not the source of a significant amount of inequality in our culture? Im not saying that these base difference justifies the amount of inequality and oppression we see today, but you are lying to yourself if you think some are not born ‘better’ in certain ways than others.

    and while you are at it

  56. A thing worth contemplating is that the wider one’s eyes are open, the less differences are seen between us. It is the half-lidded, mean-of-heart that would identify “better” human beings. Of course, those same would be inclined to declare, then, that the compassionate are de facto “better” human beings, but the objects of such a judgment would unfailingly demur.

  57. Everythjngs Jake

    Man, I want to scream. What is the point of this debate? It’s like the trees discussing whether or not to go to war in The Two Towers. Only 50 comments to degenerate into the banal, a pointless discussion as to how long the firehose should be while the house is burning down. It’s so far removed from the lives of those who are suffering and frightened, it’s not a wonder nothing changes.

  58. atcooper

    Orange,

    Beauty is a very subjective thing. From one generation to the next, if not to a finer degree, the definition changes.

    And strength, intelligence? How about sociability? Which qualities would show you the alpha? People are very flexible, and oftentimes fit roles for the betterment of a group, not take a role because of whatever talent. It can go either way. I have seen too smart or strong or beautiful be shunned from a group, and ostrasization occur based on these very traits claimed to show the alpha.

    To be sure, I am not a “everything is relative” kind of person, but this alpha thing spoken of seems to fit a relative, or subjective definition, and not an objective one at all. No, this alpha notion is a cultural construct.

  59. Morocco Bama

    re not some women born beautiful and others ugly

    It’s the current cultural perspective that determines what is beautiful, and what is not….right?

  60. Morocco Bama

    I think there are too many Alphas commenting to this thread.

  61. I think there are too many Alphas commenting to this thread.

    I nominate this as the alpha comment of the thread. 🙂 🙂

  62. orange

    Beauty is not subjective
    Beauty is not subjective
    Beauty is not subjective
    Beauty is not subjective
    Beauty is not subjective
    Beauty is not subjective

    Studies have shown this repeatedly (as if it wasn’t so strikingly obvious anyway)

    This is why the Left is not taken seriously

  63. anon2525

    Man, I want to scream. … It’s so far removed from the lives of those who are suffering and frightened, it’s not a wonder nothing changes.

    Here’s some good news from Iceland:

    Returning to the tense situation in 2010, while the Icelanders were refusing to pay a debt incurred by financial sharks without consultation, the coalition government had launched an investigation to determine legal responsibilities for the fatal economic crisis and had already arrested several bankers and top executives closely linked to high risk operations.

    Interpol, meanwhile, had issued an international arrest warrant against Sigurdur Einarsson, former president of one of the banks. This situation led scared bankers and executives to leave the country en masse.

    (emphasis added)

    link

  64. Morocco Bama

    Beauty is not subjective

    Exactly……it’s learned.

  65. Which studies have shown this? Is this from the somewhat dubious field of pop EvPsych?

  66. My credentials? “Well-read” on many topics, including this one, though I can’t claim professional status. (Not that it matters, what matters is the argument, not who speaks it).

    Stewart, don’t you know? FTB has declared that you are WRONG, that you have no thoughts worth sharing that can touch his beautiful mind. You should have avoided “removing all doubt.” How DARE you presume to take up a moment of his precious, unique life.

  67. Well, since @Everythjngs Jake’s threat of a primal scream hasn’t stopped the thread yet, I’ll weigh in again (with my own “PopPsych”:)

    If you are insisting that some sort of standard of physical beauty applies, well, then you must still be in your reproduction-imperative years. Such judgments are personal, and targeted for a specific, hormonally-fueled, goal. It’s foolish to project these impulses as having more gravity than a simple, personal, taste. Modern “universal” standards of beauty are symptomatic of a mass-media culture. Left to ourselves, we’re a bit more nuanced about such things.

    This is a fun thread…

  68. Celsius 233

    anon2525 PERMALINK
    July 6, 2011

    Here’s some good news from Iceland:
    =============================
    Now that is heart-warming; damn, I want to move to Iceland.
    It would be nice to live in a free country for a change; at least one with its priorities set correctly @ its citizens.

    Alpha smalfa; humans have finally gotten enough technology combined with a huge dose of psychosis/psychotic behavior to follow through with their death wish…

  69. anon2525

    Lord save us from what we deserve, because what we deserve is what’s going to happen: war and revolution, famine and drought, climate change on a scale we truly don’t understand.

    Speaking of climate change, drought, and famine, there is this item that summarizes the end of human civilization in two illustrations of present and future rainfall, 2000-2009 and 2090-2099: The Scorched Earth

    And maybe that we now includes me, but I’m so very tired of dealing with stupid, cruel, selfish people. Heck, forget selfish, people who won’t even look out after their own self-interest, or even understand what it is.

    There’s this discouraging note about how making buildings more energy efficient hasn’t lead to less pollution, it has just lead people to make their buildings cooler, keeping the same expense:

    “Since the early nineties, for example, energy efficiency of residential air-conditioning systems has risen steadily, but with rising summer temperatures, home air-conditioning systems have increased their average annual energy consumption even faster. Efficiency, for one thing, has made cooling much cheaper. Studies in Texas and Florida found that when state programs helped install tighter insulation and improved air-conditioning equipment, homeowners and renters did indeed take advantage of the improved energy efficiency—by keeping their homes cooler.”

    Can Air Conditioning Save You?

  70. Celsius 233

    anon2525 PERMALINK
    July 6, 2011
    Can Air Conditioning Save You?
    =====================
    Sure, if you want to be a prisoner of your home and vehicle.
    I live in the tropics (13 deg. N.Lat) and we do not have air conditioning. We live in a 2 bdrm home which I’ve surrounded with trees. We’re also rural/urban and not surrounded by cement/black-top, so we get the “real” temperature. My wife grew up without aircon here; and I grew up without it in the states and I’m very content to not have the expense every month.
    But, most importantly, I decided to forgo aircon so I was free to visit, explore, shop fresh markets, and basically not become a prisoner of the temperature. My first year here my job was in an aircon office and an aircon hotel room I lived in for a year.
    I was never comfortable without aircon; it’s a curse, IMO. And let’s be clear; I’m 66, not some youngster, so age has nothing to do with it.
    Now after 8 years without it, I’m a free man, so-to-speak.
    Oh, just as an example; last year we had 90 days of 38 – 42c everyday (February,March & April).
    My Habaneros suffered greatly… 😉

  71. anon2525

    Sure, if you want to be a prisoner of your home and vehicle.

    The article at the link points out the increasing number of days that the temperature will be what we now consider to be intolerably hot (in need of A/C). It makes a rough calculation of how much additional CO2 will need to be generated and compares that with a rough calculation of how much CO2 will be reduced by renewable power sources, and concludes that the CO2 emissions will still increase by roughly 50 million tons:

    More than a billion tons’ worth of emissions sounds like a lot, but in trying to stay cool, how seriously will we hamper efforts to slow down greenhouse warming? One way to think about it is to compare that 750 million-ton emissions increase caused by air-conditioning to the emissions reduction we might achieve by shifting to renewable power generation.

    The Energy Information Administration projects that, assuming “a future in which an explicit Federal policy is enacted to limit U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions,” electric power generation from renewable sources will increase from 415 billion kilowatt hours in 2009 to 927 billion in 2030. Assuming that rate of increase is sustained through 2050, renewable power would by then be sparing the atmosphere about 700 million tons’ worth of emissions—less than what we’d be adding through air-conditioning.

    I live without A/C, also (a good window fan and interior fans), but it’s like recycling–my doing so won’t mean anything. It takes a gov’t. policy change to require everyone to live differently.

    But voluntary restraint alone will not reverse growth in energy consumption and ecological destruction. That can happen only through hard, non-tradable limits on production throughout the economy, a firmly fixed ceiling to restrain high consumers, and a sturdy floor to assure a good quality of life for everyone. The fact that the national and global economies have no way to operate under such limits should not be a deterrent. We can scrap the economic system, but we can’t switch to another Earth.

  72. anon2525

    And even if the 700 million tons of emissions were reduced, it’s a small percentage of the total savings needed. Here is an (25-minute) audio program in which one of the speakers makes the claim that we need to reduce total emissions by twelve gigatons (the total amount of emissions by the world economy each year): Climate Change Gridlock, part 1

  73. Celsius 233

    anon2525 PERMALINK
    July 7, 2011
    Sure, if you want to be a prisoner of your home and vehicle.
    The article at the link points out the increasing number of days that the temperature will be what we now consider to be intolerably hot (in need of A/C).
    ======================================
    I read your link and it wasn’t lost on me what was being said; I thought a pragmatic aspect was in order.
    I question the terms “intolerably hot” and “in need of A/C”; maybe by spoiled western standards, but certainly not by “human” standards.
    But hey; we’re going down no matter what any body says or does (translate doesn’t) because the pipeline is so full; a shut off tap will flow for decades. Cheers…really…

  74. Everythings Jake

    Obama’s Nixon goes to China moment has arrived. Can we please have Nixon back?

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/in-debt-talks-obama-offers-social-security-cuts/2011/07/06/gIQA2sFO1H_story.html

    Thank you to David Swanson for telling Mr. Hopey Change to go fuck himself (pretty much the only appropriate response):

    http://warisacrime.org/content/killing-old-people-fiscally-responsible

    Thanks for the link anon2525. Let’s hope whatever the Icelanders have going for them is contagious.

  75. Morocco Bama

    Speaking of Climate Change, what will Iceland be called after the ice has melted? Volcanoland?

  76. Celsius 233

    ^ Fireland! Welcome to Paradise…

  77. ks

    “Man, I want to scream. What is the point of this debate? It’s like the trees discussing whether or not to go to war in The Two Towers. Only 50 comments to degenerate into the banal, a pointless discussion as to how long the firehose should be while the house is burning down. It’s so far removed from the lives of those who are suffering and frightened, it’s not a wonder nothing changes.”

    Heh. Indeed.

  78. A sample of 1 is not enough. Higher death rates do ensue from heat stroke in un-ACed contexts in tropical countries, as well as other non-fatal diseases such as kidney stones, etc. Whether that is justification for AC is another matter. I had a temperature-kept-low-in-winter/bundle-up sort of upbringing in Canada, so I’ve always found it extremely difficult to function in heat—trips to see the relatives in South Asia are usually miserable for me—and will move to eventually-habitable Antarctica if necessary to avoid it 🙂

  79. Ian, humanity has long been rotten. FDR, despite all the good he did, was also the guy who locked up Japanese-Americans. And started that pesky Manhattan Project. And said that if the bombs were ready before the end of the war, that America would drop those nuclear bombs on Germany. And as an oppressed person – well, I recommend you watch Louie C.K.’s bit on time travel, and how going to the past is only an option for white men. For the rest of us, going backwards is, well, going backwards.* The population didn’t ‘become’ contemptible. People have always been awful.

    *Outside of any putative utopian hunter gatherer societies, ok? But I bet those kind of sucked, too. Toothaches, for example. Having a uterus. Etc.

  80. anon2525

    I question the terms “intolerably hot” and “in need of A/C”; maybe by spoiled western standards, but certainly not by “human” standards.

    It’s true that “intolerably hot” is used too quickly by most people with A/C, but then there are the tens of thousands who died in Europe (France, particularly) during their heat wave in 2003 (?) and the tens of thousands who died in Russia’s heat wave last summer. That is undeniably intolerably hot. Expect more of this in the future.

  81. Morocco Bama

    That Scorched Earth article was penned by Al Gore. No thanks. If you’re relying on hypocrites like Gore to lead the way, you’re/we’re toast. Have you seen the guy’s house? His Carbon Footprint is huge. He can’t even lead by example.

  82. anon2525

    A new study by the National Center for Atmospheric Research warns that based on current projections of global-warming pollution, vast swaths of the world’s most populated areas could begin suffering from extreme drought within decades. The increasingly dry soil would threaten water and food for hundreds of millions.

    Using 22 computer models of the climate, the study indicates that the extent and severity of droughts could soon be unprecedented.

    “Shooting the messenger” has never been shown to be an effective ploy with natural phenomena.

  83. Morocco Bama

    There are many messengers, and not all of them are on the up and up. Choose them wisely and judge them by their actions versus their words.

    Al Gore is firmly behind Cap n Trade, and I believe everyone here knows what that’s all about. So long as the view/perception is that Climate Change is yet another exploitable opportunity for rapacious Capitalism, nothing will be accomplished. In fact, the net result will be Less Than Zero.

  84. anon2525

    First gambit: shoot the messenger (“the messenger is a hypocrite”)
    Second gambit: change the subject (“the messenger’s prescription is wrong”)

    And yet still the elephant remains in the room, despite all of the “shiny” distractions:

    A new study by the National Center for Atmospheric Research warns that based on current projections of global-warming pollution, vast swaths of the world’s most populated areas could begin suffering from extreme drought within decades. The increasingly dry soil would threaten water and food for hundreds of millions.

    Using 22 computer models of the climate, the study indicates that the extent and severity of droughts could soon be unprecedented.

  85. anon2525

    Here’s an example of Gore, in his own words, making a well-meaning but invalid prescription:

    So how can we make it happen? How can we as individuals make a difference? In five basic ways:

    Second, deepen your commitment by making consumer choices that reduce energy use and reduce your impact on the environment. The demand by individuals for change in the marketplace has already led many businesses to take truly significant steps to reduce their global-warming pollution.

    It is not enough for individuals to do this. It is not enough for 10,000 individuals to do this. It is not enough for 10 million people to do this. At least two billion people need to do this. And that will not happen because of the choices of individuals. It will require laws and substantial enforcement, just as is done with water use when an area is experiencing a drought. We are in a permanent drought of ecological space for more CO2. Gore is being too much of a politician with his prescription (does not want to say something so unpopular as “gov.t’ control”), or simply still enthrall to neoliberal ideas.

    And it doesn’t take into account Jevons’ Paradox, as illustrated in the example above about A/C: make buildings more energy efficient, and people will simply use more A/C to make the buildings cooler. “I used to keep my house at 70F, but now I can afford to keep it at 68F for the same price!”

    To use the medical metaphor, Gore is making the correct diagnosis, but is prescribing the wrong treatment, at least in the example above. Just because the prescription is wrong, does not mean that the diagnosis is wrong. People can ignore the diagnosis, but that won’t change it.

  86. Morocco Bama

    And yet still the elephant remains in the room, despite all of the “shiny” distractions:

    What’s the Elephant? Seriously, I’m curious. What is the Elephant?

  87. Morocco Bama

    A new study by the National Center for Atmospheric Research warns that based on current projections of global-warming pollution, vast swaths of the world’s most populated areas could begin suffering from extreme drought within decades. The increasingly dry soil would threaten water and food for hundreds of millions.

    This is a false statement, and it’s misdirecting. First of all, it’s interesting he labels CO2 pollution. It’s not pollution in the sense that it’s not toxic at very liberal levels, and it’s a necessary component of our Biosphere. Why it’s interesting that he uses the word “pollution” is because it’s a classic bait and switch. In that sense, Climate Change is the Elephant in the room….the big stuffed Elephant, and it’s sucking the air out of the overall Environmental Movement….in fact, it’s usurped it. Scientists are ignoring a host of other equally important and devastating Environmental issues because of the Elephant that has become Climate Change. Take REAL industrial pollutants, like Ozone, for example. It’s quite possible that Ozone, especially when you now add in Biofuels, is killing trees at an alarming and accelerated rate…….one of two sources of the oxygen we breath to survive. Here’s a link to a blog where the author is on the beat, but she is all too often dismissed, marginalized or ignored by Climate Scientists. They have even made statements that “they have more important things to do with their time” then test, let alone even consider her hypothesis.

    http://www.witsendnj.blogspot.com/

  88. anon2525

    Third gambit: “talk about other elephants that aren’t in the room”

    The other problems need to be solved, too. The point was to provide for everyone information about this problem, and not to deny it or change the subject or shoot the messenger, or provide some other distraction. This problem–by itself–is enough to end human civilization. Piling on really doesn’t change anything, unless we want to say, “Not only will civilization end in 100 years, but it will really, really end. Not only will the horse be dead, but we’ll be beating it with a stick for a week after.”

    Repeating myself:

    Speaking of climate change, drought, and famine, there is this item that summarizes the end of human civilization in two illustrations of present and future rainfall, 2000-2009 and 2090-2099: The Scorched Earth

    Not enough people realize how close to the end we are, and many (most?) do not even think that we are in any danger of approaching the end.

    If someone has an argument, it is with the illustrations of the data at the link provided. Not with me, not with Gore. Either the illustrations are wrong in what they predict (based on our current course of action), or they are not. And if they are not wrong, why aren’t they wrong?

  89. Morocco Bama

    Third gambit: “talk about other elephants that aren’t in the room”

    No, idiot, it’s not a gambit, and I have no agenda other than to call you on some of your bullshit. You often come off as beyond reproach. You concede nothing at this site….I mean nothing.

    You are the one that originally used the word “Elephant.” And, you used it in the Singular. Of course, as is your arrogant and condescending posture, you refuse to answer my question and instead talk to the audience….presumably, in reaction to what I wrote. You are still wounded over our little Bob Dylan tiff. Grow up, for Christ’s Sake, and get over it. That was over six months ago….it was one little argument, and right away, you want a divorce.

    Anyhow, your singular use of the word “Elephant” piqued my curiosity, because I believe you meant Climate Change was the “Elephant” and so I posited that Climate Change is certainly an “Elephant”, one of many, but not in the sense that you perhaps believe it is. But even now, my view of that is morphing, because I believe the “Elephant” metaphor is lacking, as all metaphors inevitably are lacking, but I still like them, nonetheless. Climate Change, albeit a vitally important issue for so many reasons, is a symptom, not the disease, and in that sense, the disease is the “Elephant”, and the symptom of Climate Change is its by-product/implication. Hence , my question to you about what you believed the “Elephant” to be. Of course, being your petty self, you couldn’t be bothered to answer the question, but instead attacked the messenger’s motives…….and in so doing, breaking your own vaunted rules, I presume, because the rules don’t apply to you, just as the rules don’t apply to Al Gore, hence his lavish, High Carbon Footprint lifestyle.

  90. Morocco Bama

    You are not curious, Anon, and you do not want to learn. I have a way of knowing whether the link I have provided has been followed, and it has not, meaning you didn’t even click on it. I believe that shows your true character. You are either a stubborn ideologue who has made up their mind and refuses to consider information from uncredentialed, unvetted sources, or you are a propagandist who’s mission it is to subtly, or not so subtly, steer and direct on informed blogs such as this. Maybe a combination of both.

  91. ugsome

    “I’m so very tired of dealing with stupid, cruel, selfish people. Heck, forget selfish, people who won’t even look out after their own self-interest, or even understand what it is.

    I fear I’ve come full circle. As a teenager, subject to constant cruelty, I hated humanity. ” Welcome to the world of those of us saddled with cuntholes. Oh, but DSK couldn’t have been brought down by what he did to a cunthole. No, it musta been a setup, by jing. Check your privilege, whiteboy.

  92. Jumpjet

    Does most everyone ‘deserve’ to suffer for the wrongs they’ve collectively committed?

    Of course.

    Should they?

    Of course not.

    I have not lived your life, and I am not you, so I cannot fully grasp the roots of your worldview. I have lived my life, and I am me, so my worldview is my own.

    That said: I take it as a basic truth that suffering should be prevented as far as that is possible. Suffering and pain, while perhaps satisfying to see inflicted on the deserving, in the end profit no one. Whatever I may think in my outrage and contempt, however much I may sometimes fantasize about evil men being punished, I realize that to inflict pain willingly, and to condemn others to pain, is a barbaric and animal act.

    The human thing to do is to work against suffering, even the suffering of those who might deserve it. The Christian might say especially to work against the suffering of those who might deserve it. Mercy is what makes us human, makes us higher, better creatures.

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