The
Normalization of Perpetual Disaster
Kenn
Orphan
16
October, 2017
In
case you missed it…
A
hole the size of the Netherlands has opened in the middle of
the Antarctic
ice sheet. 40,000
penguins just perished of starvation on the same continent.
And earlier this summer an iceberg weighing
one trillion tons broke away adding more momentum to inevitable
global sea level rise.
Floods
have killed thousands and displaced many more over the summer and
into autumn from China to India
and Nepalto Southeast
Asia to West Africa.
Scores of people were killed and many still missing from fires that
have scorchedNorthern
California, Spain
and Portugal. Three and a half million people in Puerto Rico are
still in survival
mode without drinking water or electricity weeks after
Hurricane Irma made landfall. Parts of the Gulf
Coast are a toxic soup of chemicals. The Amazon rain forest,
the lungs
of the planet,
are belching out smoke as it reels from 208,278
fires this year alone. And Ophelia,
the bizarre tenth hurricane turned mega storm of this record breaking
season is battering Ireland.
In
geopolitical developments, the most powerful empire on the planet is
being led by a narcissistic megalomaniac surrounded by war
mongers, religious
fanatics and disaster
capitalists. He has been madly jostling the fragile chords that
stabilize nations by threatening to annihilate
25 million people in a bath of fire and countless other
souls in the region and around the world, while demanding a 10-fold
increase to one of the most powerfully lethal nuclear
arsenals on the planet.
There
is no reason to think Trump would not carry out his threats. After
all, he dropped the “mother
of all bombs” on Afghanistan and launched military strikes
on Syria over
dessert garnishing
high praise from many in the corporate media and politicians from
both sides of the aisle. And he will get little objection
from establishment
Democrats who are enthusiastic cheerleaders for US
militarism and voted for the 700 billion dollar increase to the
already bloated US military industrial complex.
Despite
all of this an eerily bizarre normalization of this descent into
global chaos continues apace. The media seems to move on seamlessly
from one disaster or scandal to the next. Politicians shift focus and
manufacture new outrage. Meanwhile, the real existential crises
drifting us ever closer to the collapse of human civilization within
this century go largely unreported and vastly underestimated. We
are living in an age of convergence where the consequences of decades
of excess, greed, willful ignorance and dithering are finally
reaching a climax. Where the chips fall in the coming years is
anyone’s guess, but if we are honest we can get a pretty good
picture of our current trajectory.
Looking
honestly at our situation within a profoundly sick culture can often
feel alienating. If we look around we may think we are seeing
thousands of people simply going about their days as if nothing is
wrong. This may be due in part to the normalcy bias which is defined
as “a
belief people enter when facing a disaster. It causes people to
underestimate both the possibility of a disaster and its possible
effects, because it causes people to have a bias to believe
that things will always function the way things normally function.”
But this is also reinforced by a corporate culture in which
distraction and denial are encouraged and celebrated as
virtues.
Conspicuous
consumption is peddled as a remedy to all that ails our society. Some
self medicate, some absorb themselves in the shallow, or the
spectacle, or the salacious, or the vainglorious. But still
many more are simply too busy for long reflection, caring for
children or sick or elderly loved ones at a time when social safety
nets are being mercilessly slashed, or working 100 hours a week for a
pittance just to make ends meet and struggle to pay off debts for
simply living.But on some deep level I believe we all understand our
dire predicament and that it will not simply get better or go way.
Each
day the unraveling of the biosphere becomes more and more apparent.
The illusion that we are separate from the natural world is beginning
to shatter as the human generated Sixth
Mass Extinction unfurls before our eyes in real time. But in
this era of late stage capitalism and the prevalence of inverted
totalitarianism the last thing we should expect is for the
powers that be to make the bold changes necessary to stop the descent
of civilization or even provide meaningful solutions or mitigation of
the current and looming catastrophes.
Given
the graveness of the situation it is easy to feel a deep sense of
powerlessness or even paralyzed. And it may not be exactly
comforting, but we should not look at our unease as an unhealthy
response to the existential crises of our times. Contrary to the
prevailing mantra depression and anxiety should be expected as normal
responses to what we face collectively, because our very DNA is
threaded with this world’s rhythm. And without a doubt, that
collective pulse appears to be quickening.
Kenn
Orphan 2017
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