Is sitting in front of a computer for 40 hrs a week for 40 years healthy? Some might say that I'm opting out but this is opting in. This webspace will be a log of the year I finally start doing what I want...getting away from the fruitless pursuit of material gain and going for what is much more worthwhile => EXPERIENCE!

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Everyday Life - Turning the corner

Violence, even terror, always exists on the periphery of empire. They are the means by which empire is consolidated, defended, extended. Similarly, empire must respond to attack, or its basis is forfeit. All that is new about September 11 is that it didn't occur on a distant horizon. It was as if Rome had been attacked 2,000 years ago, at the height of its power.

The heartland of empire has a vast and ever-present meaning separable, and inseparable, from those twin towers in Manhattan. Everyday existence, under the sign of the capital and technology that the World Trade Center represented, also cries out.

We live in a culture of increasing emptiness; there is a vacuum at the heart of our empire. Epidemics of illegal drugs succeed one another, while tens of millions, including children as young as two, need antidepressants to get through the day. A great hunger exists for anesthesia in the face of emotional devastation and loss. Everyone knows that something is missing, that meaning and value are steadily being leached out of daily life, along with its very texture.

"The less people really live - or perhaps more correctly, the more they become aware that they haven't really lived - the more abrupt and frightening death becomes for them, and the more it appears as a terrible accident." Theodor Adorno's observation of decades ago seems even more pertinent today. Exploding jetliners and anthrax can terrify; meanwhile a much deeper crisis triggers a far more pervasive and fundamental fear.

The empire is global. There is nowhere to go to escape its corrosive barrenness. Frederic Jameson reminded us that we live in the most standardized society that has ever existed. In Global Soul, the peripatetic Pico Iyer ups the ante, meditating on how the whole world now tends towards a universal sameness. A global unity of alienness, of disorientation and disconnection, destined to resemble a mall or an airport. People now dress alike in every major city in the world. They drink Coca-Cola, and watch many of the same TV shows.

The empire's landscape of unreality and routinization grows steadily more pathological. Damage to nature and violence to the psyche compete in a postmodern culture of denial, punctuated by eruptions of the homicidal at work, at home, at school. We can expect to hear more and more alarm bells that will wake us altogether. Peaceful slumber is unthinkable.

Who doesn't know, on some level, where this empire - this civilization - is taking us? Our liberation movement needs to be qualitatively different from all the failed, limited approaches of the past. Everyday life is waiting - waiting to be truly lived.

The Imperialism of Everyday Life by John Zerzan

So as I approach the two year anniversary of leaving Australia I feel as if a corner has been turned. Farah and I are heading toward a future of our choosing and I feel inspired to embrace my idealism once more. I think it also might have something to do with the fact that the impact of the "guy on the bus" in London is now fading and I feel free to once again speak my mind. I also can't help be feel 100% sure that our world, on it's current course is doomed.

But this is by no means a time for me to be overwhelmed and give up. I think it is all of our duty to turn everything we can in the right direction. And the process of turning it all around should be deliberate, peaceful, considerate and humble. We are all in this game together. The days of rampant winner takes all capitalism are drawing to a close. Okay this may not seem clear to most but mark my words in twenty years the world will be functioning in a completely new and hopeful way and if it is not... Well I will be moving to the Tasmanian wilderness....Buying a gun and setting myself up for Armageddon... I pray this wont happen but I am a realistic idealist so there will be no holding of my breathe. So wouldn't it be wise to start preparing for the new world order.. And no don't head to the bush just yet... We need to embrace this issue and make a difference. If we don't what are our kids going to say about us??? Kids are sacred and so is the future of this planet....

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home