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Re: Re: Blackout Thoughts
Thanks for the replies everyone.
| quote: | Originally posted by loudcloud
Disagree.
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Good! 
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The life expectancy today is in the 70's. In the middle ages it was in the 30s.
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I disagree as to why this is an indication of "progress" or a good thing at all. People don't need to live longer -- people need to live better. After 50 or 60, most people just "die"! I mean that in the sense that they have lost life -- they spend their last 20 or 30 years rotting away, not developing themselves, just waiting to physically die. Though somewhat of a generalization, I do not see many elderly people "living life" -- 99% of elderly people I see have emptiness in their eyes, boredom in their eyes -- how dare they be bored with life??
Living longer is not good. Having an exciting and fulfilling 30 years to live is far better, IMO, than having a mediocre 70.
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Technology is not the problem. Progress is not the problem. There are things that could be better but I choose to think that we have not reached our final destination yet as a civilization. And that along the way there will be inequalities and our lives will be less than perfect. BUT, things are getting better. Give it a few more centuries. We have only just begun.
gosh, this sounds serious doesn't it |
I would like to think it is serious. Maybe for us "first-worlders" it is "getting better" but I don't see anything getting better for the rest of the globe. Look at Africa; all hell is breaking loose there, the media doesn't even care. Genocides, tribal warfare, starvations, diseases, you name it. The only reason this Liberian thing is firing up now is because of the politics involved. Otherwise, who cares?
Look at China. The Yangtze is now dammed for monetary and political reasons -- miles of river coast with thousands of years worth of rich cultural history is now submerged forever. And why? To satisfy some corporate and political bureaucrats; to provide more power to fuel this technology.
I see what you mean with Technology & Progress, and tentatively agree in the sense that yes, of course, technology as a concept and tool is perfectly "harmless" -- to use an overused metaphor, "Guns don't kill People, People kill People."
But -- the way people have been using technology is simply unacceptable from the point of view of the planet. We are so dependant on it, that we have totally veered off from nature. Yet, as I said in another post, it doesn't really matter in the long run -- "Nuclear Wasteland or Eden on Earth, it doesn't matter" -- but I'm sure that humanity as it stands doesn't think that way. And yet humanity is living on a fundamentally unbalanced foundation. We take so much away from nature and from this planet, and don't return enough, if anything. The amazon forest is disappearing faster than you can imagine -- entire species and ecosystems being obliterated forever just in that spot -- overfishing is depleting the ocean of much of its richness and variety -- drilling of oil is causing a lot of greenhouse gas to be produced and not to mention oil spills and other forms of oil pollution -- etc.
However, I don't think this is the main issue. What is more at stake here is our basic humanity.
Are we "going down the wrong path" in deviating from our original lifestyle, our "natural" lifestyle? People are so asleep, so unaware of nature, that they have "stopped hearing the Sun ringing" (that's from Otherland). Nomadic, "primitive" peoples live more in tune with nature -- they can sense seasonal patterns, smell storms before they arrive, feel wellsprings under their feet, they live off the land. We as an industrialized society has lost that "touch".
There is a great article in this month's National Geographic about a researcher/adventurer/environmentalist/etc. trying to protect Amazonian tribes from society (no, not the other way around). Basically, he used to be all for "contact" with the "savages" back in the '60s and '70s. Every time he would contact a new tribe, he would be amazed at how they were contended. And they have no electricity or anything modern! But after contact with society they would be destroyed -- from diseases, from "progress" -- thievery was introduced, deception was introduced, their basic balance was destroyed. So this researcher "learned his lesson," so to speak, and now has devoted his life to detecting the locations of such tribes and making sure that they never come in contact with the modern world.
Of course, the opposite may equally well be argued -- What does it matter that our way of life is "worse"? It is just different -- we as a species are not shackled by any "God" to live in a rigid way "according to Nature" -- in fact it is in our very nature to look ahead, to expand, to develop new things!
So is there ultimately no way of saying what is the proper way of living? Just like there is no "right" or "wrong" -- are things the way they are just because they are?
Personally I would like to keep it that way and feel contented -- but there is something nagging at me from the inside -- without having tasted the "savage" life, the "primitive" life, the "natural" life, I don't think I have the right to decide for myself that this way of living is "better." And especially after last night, after seeing people revert to a more primitive, albeit happier state, this nagging voice is getting stronger. But who can say for certain?
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