Thursday, February 9, 2012

It's A Wolf!


Profit.  So many people believe that money is neutral, that money is like a hand gun, in that it is not the gun which kills but the one who uses it.  This is not the case with money though, it is a different thing.  The very beginning of money is not beneficial to human kind as many would have you believe it is.  Often the greatest defense for money is the ease for which it allows us to trade.  You know, the “I have what you want, but you don’t have what I want,” so we invented money as an equal trade.  But this is a shallow perspective of what it is to be a human.  Using this argument is simply seeing things as they have always been.  By seeing money as something that makes our lives easier is an illusion.  To truly understand it one must see things from a fresh stance.  While using money for exchange of goods sounds really good and it does have truth to it, in reality though, that is not how money has been being used since its creation.  

Jump.

Metaphorically: you can give a person all the money in the world and yet if their social life is not in order they will not be happy.  Yet, you can fulfill a person’s social requirements and give them very little money and they will be happy.  Even if starving a bit.  What more does one need that profit is not good for human culture?  Even at the most basic level it doesn't serve any function other than to make those addicted to money, more money! It instantly becomes something one must acquire.  This acquisition in society is harmful and it is not necessary.  I think people can mentally grasp this but most have yet to experience it.  There is a great deal of ignorance in our culture regarding economics and culture.  The majority of people do not realize the meaning of this in their day to day lives.

For instance, when an adult says they must do something to make money instead of raise their children in a better way; this is saying money is more important.  When a parent goes to work instead of making sure their children are educated properly; this is saying money is more important than education.  When a person goes to work every day instead of fulfilling their dreams; they are saying money is more important than their dreams.  But why is this happening on such a mass scale?  Is it because children understand these things without ever having to voice it or think it even.  Is it because they end up doing unquestioningly what was done before them?  Why are so many participating in this without ever questioning it?  People are this way simply because they have not been taught otherwise; simply because they have not had a full social experience to enlighten their minds, to show them otherwise.

In our country we have been raised to believe that profit is all that matters.  Our economic well being is determined by our GDP, this gets translated culturally into, “we are the best because we have the best GDP” but as our metaphor clearly shows, this is not actually to our benefit at all.  Doesn't this seem strange when, as individuals, we can be completely happy without money?  It is in all the little things that one can see this reflected.  The excess materialism, the apathy for one’s neighbors, the lack of education, the complacency, and just a general lack of awareness.  Those in the box cannot see this though; they honestly believe that “this way” is how humans are.  They ethnocentrically believe because this is how our country is, that that is exactly how it is.  So many people are not able to see it any other way so they do not realize at all what is happening.  How can they?  Everyone around them is exactly the same! 

Jump.

A thought is not knowledge without an experience behind it.  I can know greed existed before America, but I cannot truly realize it until I have had the experience.  And yes, written words are powerful enough to incite experience.  I can experience a phenomenon simply by reading the story of another.  Empathy if you will.

I recently got my hands on a book titled, Telling Stories To Change The World-Global Voices on the Power of Narrative to Build Community and Make Social Justice Claims.  It is a collection of essays from people around the world working on building culture and justice in communities through story telling.  Two Zuni Indians from Arizona, whose culture was wiped out by greed, wrote an essay which made it into this book.  The following is from this essay by Edward Wemytewa and Tia Oros Peters, titled Zuni River—Shiwinan K’yawinanne:

The A:shiwi roamed and occupied 15.2 million acres from the wooded mountain range in the east, now known as the Zuni Mountains, to the flatland areas in the west, now known as the state of Arizona.  All of this is what we still know and recognize as our aboriginal homeland.  And it was a beautiful place rich with thriving gardens and fields, not just what some anthropologists would claim were little patches of onions or cilantro in dusty backyards where the people could barely scrape a meager living.  At one time, when the Spanish conquistadors first eyed the wealth of A:shiwi lands, the Zuni watershed was intact and the River flowed freely through our territories.  It fed streams and springs that nurtured more than 12,000 acres of agricultural land rich with corn, wheat, and alfalfa fields that were cultivated and sustained by the people.  Not to mention that the River supported an abundance of wildlife which nourished Zuni cultural and enabled a rich ceremonial life.

Peace was severed when the conquistadors Coronado and Onate invaded Pueblo territories, cutting into our homelands, and dismembering the Ancestors with swords, greed, and God.  Taking slaves, burning crops, all in search of gold when the real wealth was in corn, the power of the River, and in harmony found with the Natural World.  Christian missionaries and settlers closely followed the invaders, ravenous for Native spirits and desperate to seize non-existent Zuni gold.  Upon seeing the thousands of well-irrigated, thriving acres with the complex system of canals and ditches, their hunger for gold turned to a thirst for the most precious commodity in a desert ecosystem, water.  Harsh change came to the land and to the A:shiwi as the people saw the first glint of steel blades in the hot sun and heard the anguished sound of children crying.

Incursions into vulnerable tribal homelands continued.  The Zuni River was dammed and diverted by the Ramah Cattle Company empowering Mormon missionary settlements upriver in the late 1890s, impounding thousands of acres of water and altering the natural life and flow of the watershed.  Meanwhile, other Anglo settlers and ranchers began clear-cutting the forests, causing a dramatic increase in the amount of runoff in the drainage of the Zuni watershed, resulting in topsoil erosion and near total decimation of the ecosystem.  The sun no longer shimmered on the Zuni River.”

Sound familiar?  It is still happening today.  I used to think this was an American thing, but reading this caused me to more deeply realize that it is a bank thing instead.  Those same banks that were at the top of the pecking order then, are still there now.  Addicted to power and money, they are blind to the destruction they cause.   American culture seems to have followed suit.  When we broke away from Europe we did not break away economically nor religiously.

Jump.

Pecking order exists in all of Nature.  Naturally we are part of Nature; inherent in us is this phenomenon of pecking order. Because of religious dogma the human race is yet to grasp the full depth of what it means to have evolved for millions of years into what we now call Human Beings.   Interestingly though, pecking order does not go away simply by becoming aware of it.  It is not the same as realizing why one is angry and the anger immediately dissipating.  Becoming aware of it simply gives one the ability to notice it as it occurs.  Pecking order is unavoidable, but what is not unavoidable is who sits at the top.  Banks have been at the top of the pecking order for so long now no one questions it or realizes that humanity does not have to exist in this fashion.  Just like those that never question Christianity because that was simply how they were raised, the same thing is occurring with our cultural economic beliefs.  Ignorance is not bliss; bad beliefs do, in fact, cause significant harm. 

Jump.

I am also reading a book called Voices Rising—Stories From The Katrina Narrative Project.  This is a collection of short essays from people who survived the storm; short stories from those who did not evacuate New Orleans prior to the storm.  The introduction of the book explains that the essays contained within are a sampling of the entire collection: young and old, poor and rich, male and female.  What I found most interesting is the common themes within all of the essays.  There are two main ones.  First, the “cry wolf” theme and the second is the violence that ensued. 

Cry wolf?  The news and media hyped storms in New Orleans repeatedly.  From reading the stories it seems to be a part of life living in New Orleans; hurricane season.  We all know what this feels like.  The media makes everything always seem so dire.  The people in the essays talked about how many times they were told to evacuate for previous storms and nothing would happen.  A couple people so far have mentioned evacuating for previous storms and it never even rained.  Always warning, always making it seem like life or death, and yet nothing happens.  Some of the people said they didn’t even attempt to watch the news to see what was going on because they had heard it all before. 

Does this sound familiar?  Everyday this is happening to most Americans.  The media is constantly "crying wolf" but it never seems to be any real threat.  Then when the real threat is there, it will be too late, everyone is desensitized; no one sees it coming.  In New Orleans people literally drowned in their own attics because they could not break through their roofs to get out.  The water rose above their houses and they died.  So many more people died than the news actually reported.  The government really did keep a lid on the devastation.  Firsthand accounts tell of bodies literally lying in the streets.

When one reads of the violence that followed the storm, one becomes immediately aware that this time it really was a wolf.  Imagine walking down your street and there are dead people laying around, floating in the water, or being stepped over while you’re looking for food.  Imagine one of them who was your neighbor two days earlier, now just a corpse rotting in the street.  Imagine cops being shot at and imagine the cops shooting at you because they are just as afraid as you are.  Complete chaos.  Law enforcement officers from New Orleans are not even allowed to talk about what happened in the week following the storm.  In an interview one officer said only this, “I’m not interested in talking about what I saw, or about what I’ve had to do, to anyone.  Ever.”  This is very telling.

Americans tend to have this belief that no matter what, everything is going to be okay.  Ask someone who stayed in New Orleans through the storm about that.  The truth is it doesn’t matter how many times the media has cried wolf, each and every moment, full attention must be paid to the happenings of profit.  The greed which has been driving the world is coming to a head.  Great change is in the air.  This time it really is a wolf. 

It is easy to take life for granted.  Can you see this in yourself?

"Educate and inform the whole mass of the people... They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty." - Thomas Jefferson

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