Female Hainan Gibbon. From fauna-flora.orgEmanuele Corso -- World News Trust
April 5, 2014
From the start, the human race has been at odds with itself struggling between two distinct polarities -- barbarity and civilization -- the Yin and Yang of of human nature and experience.
This polarity has forever been the root struggle between evolution and devolution, between community and savagery, civilization and barbarity, decency and vulgarity. Naked apes evolved materially from stone axes to swords to nuclear weapons, from animal skins to three-piece suits and private jets. Wardrobe styles and technology changed, but not base instincts.
We are simply well-dressed technologically advanced apes.
While Arizona legislators are busying themselves with prohibiting undocumented persons from using public toilets, a Baptist pastor in Troy, N.Y., is giving away AR-15 semi-automatic rifles for church attendance, saying: “This is exactly what we have always done for the last 2,000 years since Jesus walked the shores of Galilee.” Baptists handing out rifles for 2,000 years! Jesus walking the shores of Galilee with an AR-15! Even religion has been highjacked and far from ministering has served to exacerbate becoming itself an expression of barbariity. This kind of madness cannot be made up.
The polarities of the human condition have not changed. Barbarians are still among and within us starting wars of conquest, grabbing wealth, asserting social and political domination. Aggression takes the form of unrelenting insatiable greed. Daily life remains a struggle between the quest for a humane civilized world versus those whose quest is social control, accumulation of wealth beyond the dreams of avarice, and disregard for the human condition. Virgil’s first century B.C. observation that for some there is an unrelenting quest for “empire without end” remains as true today as it did then.
We must ask, where do today’s barbarians want to take the world? What kind of future do they envision? Do hungry children and sickly elders without health care populate Paul Ryan’s visions of the future? Is this the stuff his dreams are made of? The barbarians argue that government, which many of us believe to be of the people, for the people, and by the people, has no business helping people, even the least fortunate among us.
What kind of unmitigated gall does it take to publicly assert income inequality does not lead to the destruction of a society when history is one story after another of civilizations falling to exactly that dynamic. In matters of civil liberty as defined by the Constitution and Bill of Rights and with no foreign nation threatening us, elected and not-elected officials cast aside the guarantees of our foundational documents with secret judicial tribunals to make us “safe” from ourselves, locking people up without due process. Our democracy is fast becoming illusion and delusion.
There’s more of course, the list could go on. We could examine the motives of the billionaires funding long lists of so-called foundations, institutes, think tanks, political action committees -- ad nauseum -- functioning as destructive propaganda machines. A well-funded all-out assault on the American social contract is underway, striking at voting rights as well as social programs.
If the coalition of Koch-funded organizations were a separate country we would have declared war on them a long time ago. Daddy Koch worked for Joe Stalin, one of the evil butchers of all time, and made a fortune doing so; his money is a gift that keeps on giving, a case of inherited moral infantile paralysis. The barbarians are at the gates with an abundant army of insecure moral cripples desperate for attention and recognition to do their bidding. But why? Why now? To what end?
This country is already in dire straits conducting endless purposeless wars around the globe, wars which will never yield “victory.” Purposeless because the underlying motives are never what is publicly declared. The obvious purposes lie in sustaining a powerful arms industry and petroleum interests. We intervene because we don’t “like” one side or the other, we violate the rights of the indigenous people to self-determination to further global ambitions of powerful economic interests, wasting our national treasure, sacrificing our young men and women while reducing our once-thriving middle-class to servile and semi-servile status scraping by to make their monthly payments.
While the roles of the unemployed grow, so do the number of lobbyists per legislator in the Nation’s capital -- something on the order of 20 per legislator at last count. America is for sale in Washington DC, where legislators and lobbyists can relieve themselves without looking over their shoulders. There are many among us in positions of power who are morally still swinging through the trees.
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Emanuele Corso’s essays on politics, education, and the social contract have been published at NMPolitics, Light of New Mexico, Grassroots Press, World News Trust, Nation of Change, and his own - siteseven.net. He taught Schools and Society at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he took his PhD. His BS was in Mathematics. He is a veteran of the U.S. Air Force’s - Strategic Air Command where he served as a Combat Crew Officer. He has been a member of both the Carpenters and Joiners and IATSE (theatrical) labor unions and is retired from IATSE. He is presently working on a book: Belief Systems and the Social Contract. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.