Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
The Moral Dead Zone
That almost bears repeating, but I won't because I don't believe it. Too many? In the moral dead zone of the human heart, perennially justified as "war" (evoking honor, triumph, glory), there's no such thing as too much suffering. There's no bleeding child or shattered family or contaminated water supply that can't be overlooked in the name of some great goal or strategic advantage, or converted to fodder for the next round of hatred, revenge and arms purchase.
Ban Ki-Moon, the U.N. secretary general, about to embark on a peace and diplomacy tour of the Middle East, was speaking, of course, about the hellish conditions in the Gaza Strip, pummeled by Israel with modern weaponry and Old Testament fury for the last three weeks. Vengeance is mine, sayeth the coalition government. Close to a thousand have died. Many more thousands have been injured or displaced. Too many?
No. Not even close. If too many had died - if hell had reached its capacity, or some other limit had at last been achieved - something would change. The collective enterprise of human violence would convulse and start malfunctioning. Fear, perhaps, would mutate into courage, anger into forgiveness, hatred into love. Or at least we would start looking at what we're doing . . . how do I say this? With evolved compassion? With an understanding, with a determination to survive, we now disdain and mock?
Israel's invasion of Gaza is the world's spotlight war right now, reaping headlines, global censure, a special endorsement from the U.S. Congress and, apparently, an audiotape hiss from Osama bin Laden, possibly from beyond the grave.
What all of these reactions do, it seems to me, is confer an unwarranted special status on the war, as though it were isolated, without a context any deeper than its accompanying propaganda. This forces us to try to understand the war strictly on its own terms - who started it? who's the bad guy? who's innocent? - rather than as an occurrence within a larger, dysfunctional system as deep as human history and as wide as planetary politics.
This war, and the nine or 10 other armed conflicts officially classified as wars that are going on right now - including wars in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (4 million dead since 1997), Darfur-Sudan (500,000 dead since 2003), Somalia (400,000 dead since 1988), Sri Lanka (80,000 dead since 1983), and of course Iraq (possibly a million or more dead) and Afghanistan (35,000 dead) - whatever they are on their own terms, are also symptoms of a human syndrome of self-destruction.
So are the local conflicts on city streets and other jungles that are too small to be called wars. So are the horrific aftermaths of conflicts that have officially ended, including poisoned environments, the ruined health of participants and bystanders, unexploded mines and bombs, the psycho-spiritual traumas that never go away, and the grievances that fester from generation to generation.
What links them in an immediate way is the global arms industry, as corrupt as it is invisible, which does a trillion dollars worth of business annually worldwide, is crucial to every major economy and is therefore served, either with overt collusion or discreet silence, by governments and the mass media.
But the problem is bigger than mere greed. The business of war, like war itself, defies rational control and containment because it is fed by the paradox of human fear. As we arm to protect ourselves and fight back, our enemy also arms, and thus is born, over and over again, the cycle of escalation, from which the cynical can profit handsomely. The industry of war is self-perpetuating.
It should come as no surprise, therefore, that, as Anup Shah noted recently in an essay on the arms industry for GlobalIssues.org, "The top five countries profiting from the arms trade are the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council: the U.S.A., U.K., France, Russia and China."
Thus world peace - at least the sort of peace that most of us envision, which is sustained by international cooperation and universal disarmament rather than subjugation and the capacity for hair-trigger retaliation - would challenge the status quo of the world's largest economies, as they have come to constitute themselves.
As long as we stay trapped in the paradox of fear, we can't even use our intelligence to save ourselves. We have employed it to serve only our self-destruction. The ultimate paradox is that the military industrial complex, that highest of high-tech human endeavors, about which Dwight Eisenhower sounded the alarm nearly half a century ago, is wedded to the most primitive of human emotions. We have become trapped in our collective reptile brain.
Only if we disarm our intelligence do we have a chance to find wisdom. And only wisdom can save us.
- Posted in


201 Comments so far
Show All"It should come as no surprise, therefore, that, as Anup Shah noted recently in an essay on the arms industry for GlobalIssues.org, 'The top five countries profiting from the arms trade are the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council: the U.S.A., U.K., France, Russia and China.'"
This quote pretty much says everything doesn't it? The most advanced nations of the world have used and are using local and regional religious and ethnic tensions to stoke wars for their own profit.
Jonathan Swift called the human race an "odious race of pernicious vermin . . . ." Clearly, he was writing about so-called "civilized" people who, historically, have wrought the most death and destruction throughout the world.
q
hmm...sounds like the US is a smaller version of the world, with the apparent leadership and the very real opposition being one and the same...kind of like Emperor Palpatine\Darth Sidious...a number of examples of this in real history and fiction...why are we so willing to trust our leaders when we actually know them as individuals so superficially?
Sioux Rose
QUICKSTEPPER: I noticed the dark irony of who's on the Security Council, too, particularly with respect to the profits of doom/death/destruction industries.
Mr. Koehler wrote a remarkable essay that points both to the pragmatic influences (greed, arms sales) that breed war, and the more subtle conditoning factors that seduce populations into enacting its lethal redundancy.
Some who post on commondreams, I have noticed, are still stuck in the linear paradigm of "who is right/who is wrong," and argue the play by play almost like sportscasters. Others seek ways to overcome the impulse towards war, which is to say transcend this awful wound that keeps recapitulating itself impacting everyone, inasmuch as the tapestry of life weaves us all together, strand by strand as in one by one. They confuse the search for higher spiritual applications with singing kumbala.
I applaud Mr. Koehler looking at this brutal means of perpetuating yet more brutality through a number of prisms, and find his articulations profound and wise. For those who insist on applying blame and siding with a team, such understanding may seem inconsequential.
Who is applying blame and siding with a team?
Sioux Rose
LEEA: Unless you post under more than one name, it's for YOU to do the homework. The forum has been inflamed lately, and if you missed that, catch up on your own time.
I didn't know this forum had teams. I thought we could all just post our own thoughts related to the article and debate where need be. If you want to side with teams, forget it.
Yeah, but then again if we are going to have teams, we should all know what game we are playing and what our objectives are and who is on our teammates are. It could be fun.
Sioux Rose.....So well said!
Sioux Rose
STEPHEN: Thank you for validating something I think has escalated in this forum lately. The horrible conflict in Israel-Palestine has prompted some in this forum to get all up in arms themselves over taking sides. What some of us wish to advance is the need for no sides at all. I know it sounds nonsensically simplistic, what with land being fought over, lives at stake... there are no doubt DIFFICULT pragmatic aspects to be worked through, but all things flow from good ideas, and the idea that's needed foremost is a way to get beyond the blame thing. It is a never ending spiral of hatred that literally gets enacted as "the sins of the father passed to the sons."
ONLY forgiveness breaks that chain. There can be no scores to even. How many more must lie dead? How much longer can the military industrial complex, OUR chief industry continue to arm the world and use PR to "justify" the reason behind these conflicts as the weapons, DU/white phosphorus/bombs/ and God knows what else, are being planned and produced to lay more young bodies to waste. If we only remain in the arena screaming for our team to win, we can never break down the arena's walls and take aim at those who set these debacles into motion, using everyone for their entertainment pleasure or equally dark profit motives.
Sioux Rose, ....so beautifully said!
I meant to say the same.
but what profit is gaining the whole world and loosing our very soul?
Sioux Rose
Loose is to untie a knot...
Lose is to forfeit something.
You meant LOSING your very soul...
lol, yeah, it will profit us greatly to gain the whole world if we loose our soul.
In which case I would call them the most primitive countries in the world. Advanced countries would never do what you describe above.
I have been remarking on this for the past 20 years. The permanent members of the security council are an absolute farce. They are the SOURCE of the bulk of the worlds conflict.
They instigate said conflicts so they can PROFIT off them. They are not there to keep the peace. They are there to ensure there perpetual wars and need for arms.
conflicts and people who instigate conflicts bring nothing real but loss to themselves.
The Glue That Holds Chaos Together
Morality can only be inforced when immorality is readily transparent, and the truly immoral are punished. The heavy-hitters and the high-end players must be exposed for what they are, and the media must be wide open to show the truth, instead of being regulated by warmongers seeking a profit margin.
Who are the "truly immoral"?
We have always been trapped in our reptilian brain. As Kant feared, war is our natural condition. Freud updated that assessment and informed us that it was somewhat worse than that. Our love of cruelty and death drives most if not all of our human projects, from the safety of repressed darkness. It is not our innate goodness that is going to save us from ourselves. The angels of our better nature have gone the way of the Easter Bunny.
Without much optimism, Kant proposed the only solution in his 1795 essay, Eternal Peace. Nobody reads it any more. It was a utopian proposal in which not goodness but intelligence took over the agenda. Not really sophisticated intelligence, just the amount of brains it takes to realize that pulling the trigger of that gun you have pointed at your own head it ultimately a silly thing to do. Kant proposed some basic rules of transparency and suggested we outlaw some of the perennial causes of war. He suggested a federation of nations, admitting that such an artifice authored by a such pack of blithering wahoos as ourselves would be unnatural, altruistic (in Dawkins' definition), authoritarian, unworkable and dysfunctional, which is exactly what the United Nations (founded on his principles) turned out to be. And our only scant hope.
I think everybody should know about Kant, so here is your chance:
http://www.voxclamantis.com/pages/immanuel.html
Sioux Rose
VOXCLAMANTIS: I'd like to set a respectful challenge to your assertion. These theories about human nature that use the spectacle of redundant wars to make their case fail to take into account the fact that most persons who have selected or been fated to participate in these bloody outcomes have been programmed by religious themes of vengeance and political systems that have given them cause to feel like retaliating against some target. I do NOT think class systems are the law of nature, but they have largely been enacted insofar as primogenitor, for one "law," gave an unfair advantage to those born to wealth, a situation that has filtered down the centuries. Second, the privileges alloted ONLY to men for centuries, have presented women with second class status, a fate that dark-skinned persons have also been forced to know and endure all too well.
What I am saying is that the models of life have themselves been flawed, and out of their inborn injustices hatreds and hostilities have brewed. It is not so much human nature, although the worst attributes ARE something most of us wrestle with, but the way people have been conditioned that has led to the appearance that war is inevitable.
It is not easy feat to redesign societies, however, at this imminent moment of collapse, when money has been divested of its value and nature is about to show who's boss (as necessary resources and intervals needed for harvest cycles both evidence anomalous performances) the case for exploring alternatives could not be stronger! It starts with equality... fairer distribution of necessities, of course; negating policies that allowed wealth (CEO salaries, hedge fund gamblers' sums) to aggregate upwards, and representation of more diverse voices at all decision making tables.
Competition over resources may remain a given, but the URGE for war has been the great PR campaign of the ages. Resonant with the raw urge of personal advantage that stems from Mars (the human ego) it has been given more exposure and expression than any other aspect of human nature, and by reflection, the Grand pantheon of innate principles that all flesh is heir/heiress to. Thus with this free reign Mars has run rampant and as this article so aptly suggests, has seen fit to arm the nations that disingenuously purport to act as the world's peacekeepers, an insidious arrangement that leads to paper profit in direct proportion to how much destruction a nation is willing to countenance, if not directly cause.
The military named their own game rightly with the acronym of M.A.D because that is what it is. It is NOT indicative of the whole of human nature when not enough voices have played a role in determining the policies that have led to so much pain and depravity for so many. The challenge is, as Koehler made clear, the choice of learning to move into higher states of understanding that these primitive responses be overcome, or argue for more destruction with unbelievably efficient and equally diabolical weapons. As Einstein made clear, the LEVEL OF THINKING that created THE problem is not the one that can resolve it.
Transcendence (can) happen(s)!
When will you transcend Rose?
Leea, the above cavalier remark you made to Sioux Rose was not justified. The survival of our species is totally dependent upon humankind transcending the ego. You arrive at this through meditation and contemplation. It is a spiritual exercise. To transcend the ego is the destiny of our human evolution and the survival of the human species. If you do not understand this, then get out of the discussion.
Why don't you get out of your own ego telling her to get out of the discussion.
Poophead.
giggle, I love you both. You are both right. You are welcome to say anything in my opinion if it is in defense of love, which I believe you are both defending so admirably.
Sioux Rose
STEPHEN: Thank you for defending me, although like so many of Leea's comments, they come flying off the cuff and try to sound glib, but I wonder if she even knows what she's asking or saying.
LEA: Transcend what? I am a teacher and spend time sharing things I think hold value with persons in this forum, and I also learn a great deal from volleying ideas with intelligent minds. Insults and cocky comments I may or may not respond to. Time is precious... anyone in a body, myself included, is here to still work on karma. Is that what you were speaking to?
Rose, no that is not what I was speaking to. Perhaps at some later date you will see me eye to eye. Forgive me for causing you such discomfort, I had no idea.
Leea
Sioux Rose
LEEA: I think you are genuinely kind and there's no discomfort, a bit of confusion perhaps. You strike me as very innocent and childlike, here in the forum to learn, and sometimes very pithy remarks come from the mouth of babes. No offense taken... and it felt good to see the lady's honor defended by some good men of the CD kingdom! (My "Mists of Avalon" reference earlier mentioned is getting the best of me.)
"it felt good to see the lady's honor defended by some good men of the CD kingdom!"
I soooo agree with this.
Thanks Rose
"then get out of the discussion."
Man, you don't give learners a chance. At least trying framing it differently for Leea to understand. Geeez !
Only a person that is spiritually bankrupt would come up with such a caddy remark.
None of us are spiritually bankrupt as I understand it winning ticket. Not you, not me, not Rose.
The reason I said that is this, Rose stated, and I quote "Transcendence (can) happen(s)!"
I assume, and please correct me if I'm wrong, that the transcendence that Rose is implying is a state of individual awareness that becomes a collective awareness.
We cannot transcend for others, we can all only transcend ourselves. That is a law that governs what we are speaking about, it is our personal and private journey as I understand it.
I was simply asking Rose if she had transcended, as she is the one bringing up the idea as a way out of our current reality. A very innocent and pure question, that when read by you and Stephen and Rose became this dark and borderline unforgivable insult that has even merited a desire to have me leave this exchange.
Will make you all feel better if I say I am sorry that in some way I might have led you to believe that is what I intended, I would always have regret that I was ever in anyway involved in such an attack, and do not see myself above such a reality in any terms because in the end when you try to hurt others you just hurt yourself worse.
You all are making me feel really bad here, and I feel you are feeling bad and I feel we can transcend that if you all just stop believing I am out to insult Rose or here just to be stupid and say stupid things.
I repeat I am sorry and hope you all can forgive me, I certainly bear no grudge against you and am here because I enjoy you all.
Leea....I apologize as well for suggesting you leave the forum. The devil in all this is the ego. I responded with the anger of the ego in defense of Sioux Rose who I have tremendous respect for, rather than compassion and understanding of the spirit. The ego always continues to haunt us as we try to rise above it.
In all this turmoil of the economy, the reckless greed of corporate capitalism, unending war, fear, hate, and the materialism of American culture that denies the power of the spirit can be most frustrating and results too often in anger, even for those choosing to try to transcend the chaos.
There is a great lesson of the damaging power of the ego in all of this discussion. Leea, in all you have posted, I am now humbled by your gentle spirit. .
My apologies again. S. Riley
....and I am humbled and feel great peace now through your humble spirit too Stephen, thank you.
Thanks to both of you. We all get off the leash from time to time, but only the people that shouldn't be here refuse to own up to their mistakes or apologize.
Kudo's to you both.
Also, do you really believe this is true;
"it has been given more exposure and expression than any other aspect of human nature"
As Einstein made clear, the LEVEL OF THINKING that created THE problem is not the one that can resolve it.
This is very timely to me...I have been having this very discussion recently...the very thinking we are using to analyze our condition is faulty, as it exists within and attempts to maintain frameworks shown to be unworkable...the very standards upon which our current lives are built must be shaken to their foundations, then left there...a new standard must emerge with a 'natural' spirituality that supersedes materialism and the forces influencing...
the individual must be re-connected to their own inner spirituality and their inter-connectedness with each other and this world as actually, molecularly and ethereally merged...the processes of sleeping, drinking, and eating must return to immediate contact with the living planet...
I don't mean to say I believe this can happen, only that I believe it must...and that it must be global in nature, premeditated and adopted in unison...
So well said!
Are we disconnected or are we interconnected? Lets choose what we believe, let it start here.
we are dis-connected from the awareness that we are inter-connected...
....so we can/have reconnect/ed to the awareness that we are inter-connected, and this is what I will believe.
Thank you dubet, this is great indeed.
>>>...a new standard must emerge with a 'natural' spirituality that supersedes materialism and the forces influencing...
I have no doubt that such a 'standard' as you call it is a kind of intelligence that will also ensure the material well being of all human beings, without the fear-based monstrosity that we have today. It's not as if a 'spiritual' person or community is going to go hungry - far from it. But my concern is that more and more people in the East - where several awakened human beings have lived and taught - are now falling prey to the very same materialistic trap, and can't wait to repeat all the mistakes that have been committed in the West in the name of growth. And that includes extreme levels of income and wealth inequalities, concentration of wealth, environmental degradation and a general disconnect between nature and the human being.
Highintel: Can we do better?
"But my concern is that more and more people in the East - where several awakened human beings have lived and taught - are now falling prey to the very same materialistic trap, and can't wait to repeat all the mistakes that have been committed in the West in the name of growth."
I can see that happening in China and India. By the way, today there was a report that in New Delhi, people's homes were bulldozed on purpose for the 2010 Olympics.
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/01/14/india.slums/index.html
It's the Commonwealth Games but your outrage is still justified.
q
It is outrageous, indeed - considering that India hasn't exactly won all that many medals in international events. Why they hell they would want to host the Commonwealth Games is beyond me. Well, I shouldn't say that, having recently read the book "Five Ring Circus" by Christopher Shaw - though it's about the Vancouver 2010 Olympics in particular, I'm sure the mechanism is the same - profits for the builders and developers at the expense of the taxpayer and those at the bottom of the society.
(May be a better question would be, who actually benefits by belonging to the so-called 'Commonwealth' in the first place - it's not like the EU or anything - you cannot even travel between the Commonwealth countries without a visa for each country).
Highintel: Can we do better?
Hi folks, sorry for the mixup on Olympics vs Commonwealth.
Alcyon, this isn't the first time. Check this disturbing report that has been going on for years. CG isn't the first and probably won't be the last one to run people out and homeless.
http://www.stephen-knapp.com/threat_against_hindu_temples_and_vedic_culture_in_india.htm
Sioux Rose
ALCYON: The phenomena you describe can be credited to advertising with its 24/7 pervasive messaging added to the German Nazi realization that the lie told often enough is perceived as true.
I remember when impoverished women in Africa, confronted with billboards telling them that artificial baby formula was better & healthier than their own breast milk, prompted mothers to try this "better thing." Who doesn't want what's best for their baby? Lacking the basic equipment that would sterilize these fake formulas, some babies died. Nestles, owner of the company that sponsored this campaign was boycotted and eventually ceased and desisted from this disgusting campaign.
India is a nation so accustomed to so much poverty that its small nouveau middle class is drunk on the possibilities. Remember that it is the LOVE of money that some have termed the root of all evil. Between our CIA giving Viagra to Afghani lords who pretty much barter for young virgin wives, and corporations selling what will kill us by utilizing today's TRUE voodoo, which is the smoke and mirrors of a functioning PR campaign, it's a wonder some can see the Truth through the dense dense din of deceptions abounding.
Sioux Rose
DUBET: You are hardly alone in coming to this self-evident realization. There are many prophecies from incredibly diverse sources that speak of ours as a turning point phase for mankind. I admire the inspiration drawn from the thousands who attend the World Social Forum. Remember its motto is: "Another World Is Possible." There is the book "Collapse," another is "The Revenge of Gaia," and lots of inroads into new forms of technology. The will exists, the creative spirit is surging, what remains in the way are those who insist (largely because their selfish profits depend upon it) on retaining the old status quo, or what I like to term homage to the old gods.
It's criminally certain that giving the billions BACK to the same hecklers who stole it through their financial instruments of destruction is proof that investing in what does not work = inane, insane and bound to fail. Birth is not an easy experience and we human beings are in the labor pang stage of giving birth to what will be next. Of course the more persons who come to the realizations that you have, and will prefer to live in peace and accept the pleasures of the sensuality long denied (claimed to be a mortal sin!) by the church-state (prejudices that have largely gone undeground to feed on the collective psyche of millions), the faster the global healing.
In Marion Zimmer Bradley's magical book, "The Mists of Avalon" there is a night each year when in the darkness masked persons completely abandon their ordinary identities and enter into sexual congress in complete abandon. This ritual, Beltane, was according to myth, believed to energize the land, render it fertile. I remember my first conception outside at the home of a person who lived within the lush landscape of the rain forest of Puerto Rico... I felt LIGHT enter "the tunnel" and knew I had conceived. Like many mystical experiences this is the type of thing that is very personal, and only those who have had similar moments can identify.
Paul Siemering
Hey Siouxrose
i do not know from Kant, but i'd like to say something about "human nature". What i want to say is first of all too many people think humanity began when civilization did, or the bible, or some other 3-4000 year old stupidity.
Whereas in fact we humans lived on this planet for about 200,000 years. all those millennia with no angry god screaming for belief and obedience or here comes the fire and brimstone.In those days we only knew mother nature, and mostly loved and worshipped her. we thanked mother nature for all her wonderful gifts, including especially the gift of sex, which we enjoyed very much, and no guilt about it either. We made our living by gathering and hunting, because before agriculture there simply was no other way. Gathering and hunting peoples are are still alive, although disappearing with tragic speed, and could teach civilized people a lot. about spirituality and love and what's natural. and they never heard of such a thing as war, it's true that this is in part because gathering and hunting bands are necessarily small- 20, 30 people, and you really cant' have ars without nation states to wage them, but just the same, the point is that we- us humans were quite nice and peaceful most of our lives. Before the holy books and the history books.
finally (for today only) societies were matrifocal, as women were recognized by men as special beings because they could bring forth new humans, and because they were the primary food providers, and as gatherers they knew the properties of plants, and so were the medicine mothers, the healers. plus the female orgasm was regarded as a very high spiritual experience. Transcendent, actually.
Sioux Rose
ABUELO: I 100% agree with you, and thank you for posting this material. As a matter of fact I have been working for a long time on a book that explains the processes of time and the dominant illusions that accompany each age phase... time truly is embedded with thematic structure, a cosmic equivalent to the notes that make up the scale we appreciate as music. The composer Holst understood the unique emanation of each planet as inspired in his compositions on each one. (Many of you have heard these melodies as they're frequently used as background music in documentary films about nature.)