"NATO
and the United States should change their policy because the time
when they dictate their conditions to the world has passed,"
Ahmadinejad said in a speech in Dushanbe, capital of the Central
Asian republic of Tajikistan
Beyond
Ownership: The New American Dream
Guy
McPherson
30
June, 2017
“We
want it all, and we want it for a very long time, and preferably
forever, a concept that our deep-seated faith in technology, our fear
of death, and our uniquely American vanity allow us to pursue. While
seeking immortality, we want a big house with a well-trimmed lawn,
new cars, plenty of grown-up toys, a prestigious job, frequent
vacations to exotic (but safe, of course) locales, excellent
restaurants along the way, and plenty of people at our disposal to
care for the details.”
—Guy
McPherson Going
Dark
SAN
ANTONIO Belize—(Weekly
Hubris)—July
2018—The phrase “The American Dream” was popularized by James
Truslow Adams in his 1931 book, The
Epic of America.
My 2005 book, Killing
the Natives,
begins with a comparison of Adams’ ideas to the version of the
American Dream articulated by First Officer Spock in the television
series “Star Trek” (“live long and prosper”).
“Since
the historian James Truslow Adams popularized the phrase in 1931
until shortly before Mr. Spock’s eloquent catch-phrase became his
signature line, the American Dream meant that ‘life should be
better and richer and fuller for every man, with opportunity for each
according to his ability or achievement.’ Adams was clear to note
that the American Dream was not about material possessions; rather,
it was ‘a dream of a social order in which each man and each woman
shall be able to attain to the fullest stature of which they are
innately capable . . . unhampered by the barriers which had slowly
been erected in older civilizations, unrepressed by social orders
which had developed for the benefit of classes rather than for the
simple human being of any and every class.’
“This
was a dream in which all Americans would ‘devote themselves to the
“Great Society” . . . . We cannot become a great democracy by
giving ourselves up as individuals to selfishness, physical comfort,
and cheap amusements. The very foundation of the American dream of a
better and richer life for all is that all, in varying degrees, shall
be capable of wanting to share in it. It can never be wrought into
reality by cheap people or by ‘keeping up with the Joneses.”’
“After
World War Two, as personified by Spock a scant few decades after
Adams popularized the term, the American Dream came to mean something
quite different: Increasingly, we seem to be ‘giving ourselves up
as individuals to selfishness, physical comfort, and cheap
amusements.’ We now spend our lives trying to keep up with the
Joneses; in short, we have a burning desire to live long and prosper.
“We
want it all, and we want it for a very long time, and preferably
forever, a concept that our deep-seated faith in technology, our fear
of death, and our uniquely American vanity allow us to pursue. While
seeking immortality, we want a big house with a well-trimmed lawn,
new cars, plenty of grown-up toys, a prestigious job, frequent
vacations to exotic (but safe, of course) locales, excellent
restaurants along the way, and plenty of people at our disposal to
care for the details, such as attending to the house and cars,
planning the vacations, and serving the food at our favorite
restaurants. Isn’t that what the pursuit of happiness, which is one
of our unalienable rights, is all about?
“But
we don’t want to pay for it, at least not all of it. When the bill
comes due, we grudgingly pay a small portion of it. The remainder,
which is often the largest share, includes the devastating loss of
ecosystems, languages, cultures, and species. Our natural and
cultural heritage, the product of millions of years of evolution, is
threatened at a global scale by Americans pursuing the American
Dream. The following chapters explain how we pass those costs to our
children, their children or, in the archetypal version of the
American Dream, poverty-stricken people in other countries. Out of
sight, out of mind is the perfect version of the Dream.”
Adams’
book was published a couple years into the Great Depression. About
seven decades later, a couple of years into the Greatest Depression,
US President George W. Bush described his version of the American
Dream. In a truly Orwellian turn, “the ownership society” was
coined to rally support for tax-cut proposals. According to this
view, ownership has become an American right, and the more one owns,
the wealthier one is.
It’s
no great stretch to suggest that the new American Dream comprises the
uniquely American goal of getting something for nothing and calling
it entitlement. Indeed, the apex of the new American
Dream is to get everything for nothing and call it well-deserved.
My
latest essay in this space dealt with the idea
of ownership. I’d be hard pressed to find a worse idea than
ownership, an idea that lies at the root of our myriad predicaments.
In this brief essay, I follow ownership to its logical conclusion:
human behavior.
I
can already hear the cries of protest. Please, bear with me. Try to
listen beyond the frantic, self-indulgent voices of relatively
wealthy, heterosexual, Caucasian men. These are the voices we often
hear, because these are the voices of the prevailing owners.
The
notion of ownership is entertained only at great costs, many of which
are unacknowledged by the dominant paradigm and unrecognized by the
masses.
For example, once we accept the slippery slope of ownership,
boundaries cease to exist. We ignore, hate, and enslave those we view
as “other.” And we’re easily manipulated into seeing the
“other” as anything beyond our own self-identified selves.
Witness the Great Lie known as American exceptionalism.
Nearly
everyone within the American-led system of ownership readily
capitulates to a system that provides enormous benefits to a few,
ample benefits to many, a few benefits to the majority, and
horrifying conditions for the remainder. The system has embedded
within it a monetary system designed by the few to benefit the same
few at the apex of the system. These few are called patriarchs. The
system is called patriarchy.
Contrary
to prevailing opinion, it is not all men who make up the patriarchy.
Not all men rule, and most men are exploited. Patri- (from pater)
means “father” in Latin and Greek and can be traced to the
Indo-European languages where it first appeared with the emergence of
the concept of patriarchy a few thousand years ago. Consider the
recent rise of patriarchal societie,s described in the following
three paragraphs, virtually coincident with the rise of ownership as
a “fine idea.”
In
many pre-patriarchal societies the word father did not exist separate
from “mother” (one of the oldest words in all regions of the
world). From the time “father” was separated from “mother,”
the former term denoted the concept of ruler-ship, consistent with
its current meaning. Rulership and ownership tend to overlap.
The
current meaning of father (aka, ruler) is normal only in the
sense that civilization is normal. Of course, it’s all we’ve ever
known, and it’s the source of the written record of humans. But to
claim civilization is normal is to deny the initial few million, not
thousand (ARGH thousand) years of the human experience.
Accepting
the concept of patriarchy as “normal” allows us to accept the
horrors of civilization as normal. These horrors include destruction,
violence, and oppression. They include war, fouling the air,
polluting the waters, trashing Earth, extinction, and poisoning
fellow humans. For the most part, we turn away, thus becoming willing
participants in the horrors of imperialism.
And
why not ignore these horrors? To accept responsibility implies
alternative action, including actions that might have us arrested,
shamed, incarcerated, and worse. Accepting responsibility is painful.
Acting on that responsibility is tortuous, for the willing few.
Accepting
reality leads to difficult introspection and, in some cases, even
more difficult personal choices. It may also lead to counter-cultural
acts. Acting beyond the dominant paradigm, which those in the
dominant culture claim to support but actually punish, could lead—and
has led—to incarceration, torture, and early death. Supporting the
dominant paradigm supports destruction, violence, and oppression, as
indicated above. For most people, the decision to support the
dominant paradigm is easy.
At
this late date in the history of Homo sapiens, patriarchy
is the only game in the “civilized” world. It dominates every
aspect of life on Earth, including our private, personal lives.
Consider, for example, our closest relationships. The workplace and
the marriage-industrial complex are among the many institutions
characterized by patriarchy.
During
my early days of teaching college classes, I had a student proudly
proclaim that homosexuality was a horrible act, conducted by horrible
people. Whether you believe in God or evolution, he said, you have to
believe there is no purpose to homosexuality. Ergo, it is wrong.
The
student was adamantly expressing his entrenched understanding of the
dominant culture. Heterosexual monogamy is good. Every other sexual
act is bad. Indeed, every other type of relationship is bad.
Much
later, when I was teaching at a small, state-funded university in
southern Utah, I stumbled across a similar tragedy. When asked for
three sources to support their written perspectives in scientific
analyses, students routinely cited the Christian bible and their
fathers as two of the three sources. Patriarchy rocks, Dude.
There
is expansive evidence for homosexuality in non-human species. There
is no evidence of purpose in the entire universe beyond the purposes
we assign to our own insignificant lives. The entire concept of
divinity is rife with assumptions unsupported by evidence. The
assignation of evil to human acts beyond imperialism is ludicrous.
The
marriage-industrial complex is a product of civilization. It has
become embedded within dominant religions, which are uniformly
characterized by the “golden rule.” Marriage, like gold and the
associated rule, is part and parcel of imperialism. Men own their
women, and also their children. Non-monogamous relationships are
weird to the point of being dangerous.
The
bottom line, as always within the patriarchal dominant paradigm:
There is only one proper way to live. Attempting to live differently
warrants, at best, disparagement. It’s small wonder we hover at the
brink of extinction.
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