Real is Good
Reality, Freedom and the Computer Network
By
Sand Sheff
Introduction:
We are being lured into the universe of the machine. What we leave behind is
a place we once called reality.
How did this happen so fast? With
so little conversation? Free time
finds us screaming, “I am somebody!” into a toxic binary ocean where being
somebody is a matter of opinion, to say the least. It is one machine now, so
close to defining the human race.
Turn away for a second. Take a breath.
Turn away for a second. Take a breath.
There is only one natural reality. It
didn’t hide its intentions from us. Natural reality didn’t GPS our locations
or take pictures of our house for its map. It never obliterated our time by
making us run faster and faster like we’re part of a hamster-wheel “video
experience” instead of a human tribe. Natural reality never scanned us or
chipped us or catalogued or cloned us. It certainly didn't create robot
replacements for us. Natural reality gave us a place to thrive. It did not
condemn us to a doom without dignity.
Why? Well, for starters, it’s become obvious that the digital network is
being used to increase the power of the usual greedy batch of run-of-the mill earthly tyrants. Tyrants are bad news, to be sure, but they aren’t the worst
of our worries. At the end of the line waiting for this machine to be fully
installed is The Big Tyrant. You can’t put his face on a wanted poster because
he looks like nothing, like darkness. He’s an It, a shadow that follows the
human race around. He gets called by a lot of different names.
Of course, as everyone knows, the new technology also
does us favors. It’s amazing, awesome and totally super neat-o! It’s entertaining, informative, and creates
“community”. It’s convenient for
business, communication, travel and
viewing sexy pictures of hot starlets. The computer
network is the greatest thing since sliced bread, right?. Sure, it's great. That's why everybody has It. Still, there’s
not enough time to tip-toe around the holographic tulips. This thing eats
freedom. It won’t care how smart, holy or hip you are. It gives no regard to
religion, economic status, cultural position, race or age. It corrupts
consciousness.
Step back, maybe you can
just laugh at it. It’s not even real, after all-just a flashing lie, a phosphorescent shadow, a digital mirage, a weird
dream within a dream within a very real thing. What can you say? It just is what it is. What was the bad guy’s
disguise at the end of the story? Robbie the Robot! Ha! Good one. We should
have seen it coming.
Welcome back to your story, my friends. It’s either time to pray hard or party down, depending on your persuasion. Either way, I wouldn’t recommend signing up to any new social network sites. Your best friend there is old Big Brother.
Did we say to our fellow fishes as
we swam in the ocean of life:
“Hey! Check it out, guys, here’s a
big NET! And, look, there’s a sign that says: ENTER! Net? Enter? Well, don’t
just float there, let’s go on in!” ?
Folks, what happens when you enter
a net or a web? Doesn’t something come along and eat you? It somehow advertises itself as the trap it is,
making us spiritually complicit by our own comical naiveté -like we’re the dumb
guy in some cartoon. Something (and I believe it's a spiritual force) wants to show how stupid we are. Maybe we’re not
stupid, just gullible. We were gullible to believe that our priests and
philosophers and singers and scientists and politicians and journalists would
make sure and warn us before we got into a situation as truly dangerous as this one. But they
didn’t warn us. They didn’t because they were too busy surfing the web, just
like we were. It’s been a real surfing safari, folks.
Surf City, here we come.
Surf City, here we come.
Complete with its games, its drones , its robots, its alternate universes, its phony global omniscience. The way things are going, It's probably getting ready to turn into some creepy AI personality with his own "reality" show.
The consolidated computer network in all its relationships and manifestations is our ancient enemy reborn.
And it wants to take away free will. But we could be tough and brave and say no to It and yes to the natural world, and the God who made this earth for us.
The consolidated computer network in all its relationships and manifestations is our ancient enemy reborn.
And it wants to take away free will. But we could be tough and brave and say no to It and yes to the natural world, and the God who made this earth for us.
It's not my job to give you religion,
and I don’t think we need any new religions. The ones we have work just fine, I suppose. I
have no way of knowing what you believe or who you are. We believe what we believe.
I’ll try and keep it fun. How about
this? I’ll promise big results. I’m not kidding, folks. This is a financial
planner, exercise book and self-help primer all wrapped up in one nifty
package. Here's the pitch:
Do it the “Less IT, more Fit” Way!
Just follow these simple
suggestions:
1) Cut
back screen time by 75%. Keep your kids away from screens as much as possible
(except maybe for communal things like Saturday morning cartoons, The Wizard of
Oz or big sporting events).
2) Begin referring to the Internet
every now and then as “the beast” or “that thing” or “It” and mocking the
screen on occasion, dismissing it to its face, maybe sticking your tongue out
at it. Deride its influence. Call it creepy. Don’t worry, there’s nothing in the screen. It’s not alive.
3) Take yourself off Facebook,
Twitter, Cyberprayer.com, Sexysingles.org etc… all those social network, chat
type of things that demand your constant upkeep and input.
4) Take two walks a day and just be
with natural reality; with whatever is around you in the moment, with love. Try to experience the now. Read
good books (not so many screens). Sing a little, or a lot…out loud if you get
the chance. Be sure and breathe. Relax.
5) When you feel drawn towards
unnecessary interactions with machines, stop and go walking again. This is
where the weight loss comes in.
I say I heard it in the silence,
prove to me it isn’t so.
“Well, I’m trying out this new “no
Internet diet thing”…that’s why I haven’t returned your e-mails.”
See, I’m already helping out.
Moderation is the key. Follow the
middle path. But in the end, there’s absolutely nothing wrong or weird about
just canceling your TV and Internet service if you feel like it. You’ll save
money and time and probably feel better.
Defend creation. Preserve
consciousness- all while saving money and getting some extra free time. Who
knew fighting the good fight could be that easy or this much fun?
Yours Truly,
Sand
99 Theses
for the Age of It
Part One -R eality, Time, Fire and Story
Number One –Real is Good
Real is good. Whatever the substance might be of what we
call reality, this substance is good and preferable to any computer simulation
of that reality. Real is better than virtual. It is intrinsically better. It is
eternally better. This is my assertion and my belief. If you think scientists
and corporations can improve on the nature of reality, you are welcome to your
belief. Personally, I don’t think it’s possible to improve on a tree, a star, a
dolphin, a mountain, a baby or a woman. No virtual universe will ever come
close to improving on reality. Nature is worthy of honor, both within us and
around us. All heavily-funded efforts to alter our conception of reality should
be viewed with skepticism.
The place we used to call the real
world is inhabited by the energy form we call spirit or consciousness. There is
no spirit or consciousness in the world of virtual reality. Nothing lives
inside the machine and its programs. Nothing. The machine contains electricity
and information, not spirit. All truth
exists only in the realm of what we have traditionally referred to as the real
world. An impossible position to prove? Hardly. One quick prayer or meditation
will inform you of the same conclusion. The computer network is an alternate
reality that completely lacks the presence of spirit, life, consciousness, or
God. Real is the only real.
Number Two-Existence tells a Story with Time
This place called time allows for a notion known as story.
We notice these stories, shape these stories and refer to these stories. All
the peoples of the world have stories to provide meaningful explanations for
their existence and how to behave. Religions have stories. Nations have
stories. Social groups have stories. Families have stories. Individuals have
stories. Story comes with the territory of consciousness. Any attempt to
eliminate story simply results in new stories. Even science tells its own story
under the guise of independent observation.
Reflection on the shared story of
existence reveals cosmic or spiritual elements to this story, unseen forces
affecting the land of appearances. We accept this unseen force, and offer it
various titles, usually one of our names we have for the idea of God or the
Creator or Spirit. But we also call these unseen forces the Universe,
Consciousness, Being, coincidence, synchronicity, fate, luck, mystery
etc…Quantum physics has introduced the idea that observation apparently affects
the process as well, which seems an important idea however one wishes to take
it.
This Universe appears to be set up
in such a way as to encourage story. Time, space, life, light, geographic and
climactic elements, the presence of oxygen and water, the way the human mind
works, all provide strong circumstantial evidence that this place called earth
is home to a story.
Number Three- There are universally recognizable elements
to all stories.
Stories contain characters, setting, plot, tension, and
typically, a climax. We can’t avoid this way of perceiving existence and truth.
We are born storytellers and story-dwellers. Even our most mundane description
of the day’s events takes on story form.
Even
science tells stories to impart its worldviews to common folk. Data and theory become
interpreted in the form of story.
“and then one day we came down from the trees
and walked on two legs”.
It’s a story with tension (will
they adapt?), a hero (the apemen…that’s us, I guess), villains (the natural
predatory order, extinction) and a climax (then we became people!!) Scientific
discoveries are often told in story form…”and then Galileo saw the rings of
Saturn” or “and then Pasteur made the vaccine!” or more recently- “ then the
Bomb stopped the war” or “then we made robots to help mankind.”
Stories are a universally accepted
means of imparting and sharing truth. We tell them all day, everyday. Stories
can only be interpreted, however. They can’t be “proved” in the classic sense.
Things you can “prove” cease to be stories. If I drop a rock, it will fall to
the ground. This statement can be proved, but it’s not much of a story. “The
universe started with a Great Big Bang” is a story that can’t be proved, but
still sounds like a pretty good story.
Stories that achieve lasting favor
tend to address conflicts between love and hate, freedom and slavery, wisdom
and ignorance, courage against the elements, good and evil, or a personal
battle between one’s own weakness and will. Think about a story that you love
(whether it’s Snow White, The Bible, or Jaws 3) and you’ll likely find it
residing in these patterns. Perhaps I’m just stating something obvious, but
there’s a point here.
Stories are how we understand
existence. Whoever or whatever controls the storytelling process controls our
relationship with truth. The new visual technologies are storytelling
technologies.
Number Four-We are handing our story over to the new
technologies.
Consider the old ways of storytelling that are on the way
out: the campfire story, newspapers, theater, record albums, paintings and
sculptures, books, puppet shows, sing-a-longs, live music…
The new technology is an
information technology. We adapt our ideas of cultural memory to its capacity
for data storage, what it loosely calls "memory". The technology then
either erases cultural memories that came before it or adapts them to the
network. By the nature of its high-speed format, it also sabotages attention
spans, leading many people to not even want to read a book or listen to an
entire record album anymore.
Our music and our story is being
contained and delivered by a machine. That machine’s grip on our wisdom and
culture gets stronger every day.
Number Five- Life in Reality encourages imagination.
Life in the place we used to call the real world encourages
imagination. Life in the digital age hinders the development and use of
imagination. Does a child who plays video games have as rich of an experience
as one who plays outside with other children? Which boy is more creative: the
one who learns to play guitar or the one who learns to play the Rock Star Video
Game?
Has our music or popular culture or
children’s playtime improved since the arrival of the Internet and video games?
If so, then why does everything seem a little bit like a rip-off these days?
Sometimes it appears like there hasn’t been an original cultural thought for decades. If ideas are original,
they often come in the most prurient and despicable forms, as popular culture
has apparently decided to push our boundaries of taste by pushing the
boundaries of decency and dignity. That we even have a sub-category of film
known as “torture porn” says volumes about our society.
Frankly, many of our people appear
well on their way to becoming little more than button-pushing meat machines.
Heads down, faces to their phones, thumbs-a-blazing; consuming like livestock
in a drive-thru pen, entertained by the most unwholesome circus that ever came
to town.
Imagination lets our minds grow and
thrive. The digital age leaves very little to the imagination. I contend that
this is not a healthy situation.
Number Six- We love Stories and Fires.
Stories are told around fires.
Once upon a
time we sat around fires, stared into the flames and told each other stories.
Then a box of flickering electricity came into our homes and upon our persons.
Now we stare into this “fire” while it tells us the story.
This is the fundamental unspoken
explanation for the acceptance and popularity of visual technologies-from the movie
to the TV to the video game to the computer to the cell phone. We can’t take
our eyes off light sources that resemble fire. The human race accepted a
relationship with visual technologies because of our trust in story and
fire.
The ability to tell stories and
make fires is a fundamental part of human character. The story around the
campfire has been our heritage for thousands of years. We stare into the fire
while someone tells us stories. This relationship came into the home with the
hearth and fireplace. The hearth in the home was replaced as an altar about 60
years ago by a storytelling machine emanating crackling light. The storytellers
of old were the ones that told us the truth. So we gaze into the new fire
seeking the truth, and what do we see?
Number Seven- We are losing the ability to interpret basic riddles or read signs.
Having been force-fed a pseudo-scientific, non-meaningful
explanation of the Universe, we lose the ability to interpret basic riddles or
read obvious signs. We seem unable to understand simple historical patterns.
The interpretation of information is left up to so-called “experts”, who appear
as commentators on visual technologies. We are so barraged by information that
truth itself has become an anachronistic idea, something that folks used to
believe in, perhaps in the “good old days”. A society divided from any sense of
its own history or cultural memory is inevitably being prepared for its
downfall. It lacks the ability to learn from the mistakes of the past. It also
lacks the authority to convincingly warn itself when elements of society are
seeking new levels of power at the expense of the masses.
When Martin Luther spoke out
against the Medieval Church’s practice of selling indulgences (essentially
tickets to heaven or “Get out of Hell Free” cards), he was simply stating that
the practice was not Biblical or logical, and that there was an irony involved
in doing something so preposterous.
When the Founding Fathers of
America, undeniably rational men, decided to separate the colonies from
England, they had no scientific “proof” that the idea known as freedom was
necessary to the human condition. They founded the nation on principles that
are difficult to define, yet universally recognized.
“We hold this truth to be
self-evident, that all men are created equal…”
In fact, we seem unable to
communicate much of anything to anybody else these days. In the ultimate
paradox of the information age, the ability to share unlimited information has
resulted in the most uninformed population in history, a population that doesn’t
have the time to care about things as fundamental as their own survival,
rendered mute and powerless even as we blog and tweet about everything under
the sun.
Our most popular shows on TV star
people whose private lives are exploited, where “reality” is re-defined as
“show”.
The most popular show on the
Internet is pornography.
The most popular show in the world
is the “social network” -where our lives become a show.
It just so happens that the real
story (the one that happens in the place we used to call the Real World) is
probably about truth and freedom. In that real story, there is a shadow Force
that works in opposition to freedom and truth and love. Most of us suspect that
such an “enemy” figures in the story of humanity. This suspicion of a “cosmic
enemy” comes to us naturally, and is a universal phenomenon. Political,
religious, and economic forces have always taken advantage of these natural
suspicions by re-directing them at other religions, cultures, nations or social
philosophies. This strategy works to cement power. Forces in power know the
best way to create the tribal unity they need is to confront or invent an
enemy. We would be fools to expect much truth from corporate or political
forces engaged in the process of ruling and moneymaking. The installation of a
vast international brain that rapidly takes over our lives should be looked at
with heaps of skepticism- or at the very least, caution. But people are easily
deceived. They love order. They love convenience and entertainment. They enjoy
feeling important. They especially like magic tricks.
We have largely lost the ability to
interpret basic messages and riddles about the world around us. You will
re-discover this ability within a few weeks of canceling your internet and
disconnecting your cable service, provided you walk out every day into nature
and consider the real world that was given us free of charge.
Number Eight- Enter the Net. Or, if it’s a World Wide
Web, there must be a Spider.
Enter net. A prophetic pun. A mundane cosmic joke that
proclaims its own punch line. It’s supposed to be funny, I suppose.
What happens when you enter a web?
Who is the spider?
Look at the fate of the fly.
Bugs don’t get away with surfing
webs for long. Why should we be different? A hundred years ago, schoolchildren
would have laughed at what amounts to a nursery-rhyme testament to humanity’s
misplaced faith.
This isn’t a human conspiracy. It’s
too odd and beautiful for that. Yes, people installed the network and profited
from that installation. But in the end, it’s not a human that intends to occupy
this extraordinary tool of tyranny. It mocks us. A basic riddle.
Number Nine-WWW=666
In Hebrew, letters are also numbers. The correspondent letter for W, or the “wa” or "vah" sound in
Hebrew, is also a number 6. This factual curiosity receives very little notice
and, when it does, much derision. Still, it is apparently the elegant and possibly coincidental truth that
the 13th Chapter of the Book of Revelations in the Bible can be read
to say the “number of the beast” is WWW.
But as exhausted and brainwashed as we currently
are, there is little guarantee that even this easily translatable tidbit makes any difference. Our current stock of media evangelists are far too
busy making money, hating Muslims, aligning themselves with political
profiteers, and building fancy websites to dare mention that the beast (which attempts to conquer free will) warned
about in the Book of Revelations almost certainly turns out to be the computer
network, or at the very least will use that network to achieve its ends,
whether you put stock in any particular translation or not. With souls on the line, with
human spirit, nature, freedom and consciousness at stake, their cowardice is
appalling.
Number 10- Let’s call it It.
It calls itself IT, Information Technology. I call it “It”
too, but I’m not referring to the technology itself, which is a heap of wires,
plastic and electricity. The real It is our old nemesis, the shapeless shadow
on the human race that works through one side of our humanity to attack
innocence, decency, nature and freedom. It has followed us around since the beginning.
Some call this force a devil, but unfortunately such names often conjure
cartoonish images, and this force is not a cartoon. Until now, the It operated
on earth within the confines of the human mind, limited by our biology and human
intelligence. Finally, it’s apparently tricked us into giving it an earthly
form and mind, so that it can shape the future of the human race. The It has
begun to occupy the computer network.
Number 11-It appears as an angel of light.
The It is simply a shadow, a lie, a formless fallen angel.
But it can appear as an angel of light when we give it the power of
electricity. The shadow glows. The angel of light that appears then appeals to
our vanity, our boredom and our desires.
The digital angel, the magic man,
the huckster, complete with new illusions-now in 3-D, all smoke and mirrors,
kind of Las Vegas-y but not as fun. In spite of the reality that waits outside
our door, we prefer the magic trick. The incredible variety of natural
existence is ignored to look at a shiny fire box…
“It performs great signs, even making fire come down from
heaven to earth in the sight of all; and by the signs that it is allowed to
perform on behalf of the beast, it deceives the inhabitants of earth…and it was
allowed to give breath to the image of the beast so that the image of the beast
could even speak…”
From that dusty book that’s lying
around somewhere
Revelations 13
Number 12-A very real illusion, a story performed with
spirit.
The complex theories of quantum physics have recently gained
popularity. Taking a cue from these efforts and some Eastern thought, many in
the “New Age” community are chiming in with Jesus and other mystics’ descriptions
of this reality.
“I am not of this world”. Jesus said that.
“Look upon the world as you would
on a bubble, look upon it as you would a mirage.” The Buddha said.
This world, when examined under the
most powerful microscopes, is simply vibrating energy that has no true shape.
Matter is not matter in any way that can be truly defined. Solid is not solid.
At the bottom of it all is what? An illusion? A dream? A story? Hindus have
expressed something to this effect for centuries. In their cosmology, God has
taken on all the shapes and identities in the "play" of reality- a
fact these "characters" promptly forget lifetime after lifetime. Now,
to be sure, the Jews and the Muslims have a different take on the reality of
this place, as do you and I and everybody else.
But most of us agree on one thing: even if it is a dream, what
goes on here matters. Sure, maybe it’s an illusion, but it’s a very real
illusion filled with genuine elements such as love, sacrifice, family, friends
and nature. Long ago, it became obvious to our ancestors that what we do in
this lifetime resonates on an unseen plane. We defend our eternal soul by our
earthly actions. We justify our ancestors when we behave bravely and with
decency. We honor God by doing the right thing here on earth. This appears to
be a story, and what’s behind that story can’t be seen or described. The
physicists never get to the bottom of it, no matter how many new particles they
discover. Only the mystics and the prophets seem able to approach the truth,
and because of the constraints of language, they usually just leave us with
riddles.
Number 13-We believe in natural reality because consciousness is real.
We behave with a sense of morality instinctively, knowing
that moral sense much as a bird knows its migration path. Consciousness is real
and informs our existence. Particles may not have any substance, but
consciousness and life do. Consciousness may be the only force that can be
considered “real” in this situation. Consciousness can also be read as spirit
or perhaps “soul”.
Suppose a machine is allowed to
trap consciousness by melding with the human mind and body. Suppose internal
consciousness receives instructions from an outside source. Can there then
remain any free will?
Furthermore, because of the nature
of the relativity of time (“Past, present and future are an illusion, no matter
how persistent” Einstein famously said), couldn’t such a trap be “eternal” on
some level? The Prophet in Revelations is adamant about warning the inhabitants
of a far-distant future. There’ve been plenty of tyrannies and empires
enslaving us from time immemorial. Why would 666 be different? Perhaps because
the It lays a trap not for freedom, but for free will. It lures us into
intimacy with a machine that lacks human characteristics like love or mercy.
This is unprecedented. All people
should find common ground in addressing this threat. Consciousness, which
exists simultaneously within time and beyond time, can be hijacked by this
machine. We may very well be lured by promises of a virtual heaven and
delivered to a techno-hell instead.
It is an inter-dimensional trap,
crafted in predatory detail by a desperate cosmic architect. It is a prison
masquerading as a dreamscape.
Number 14- As history progresses, tyranny becomes more
efficient.
Tyrannies are always popping up in one form or another. But
every now and then, they evolve in fantastic new directions. Tyranny utilizes
new technology in these periodic growth spurts.
From the domestication of the horse
to the invention of wheels and guns, from the airplane to the Intercontinental
Ballistic Missile, new technology not only makes life easier for some, but also
advances the aims of empires. The efficiency of tyranny increases through
history-just as the collapse of those tyrannies becomes more spectacular.
The Nazi empire only lasted from
1933 to 1945. Employing the latest advances in modern warfare, including
primitive computing capabilities, they launched a well-coordinated assault on
their neighbors, as well as on certain members of their own population. The
Nazi war machine and social control systems were an extraordinarily efficient,
and initially successful, operation. These efforts at establishing the fabled
Third Reich would have been more successful had Adolf Hitler not been a
neurotic, unstable man. His initial successes made him vain and hasty. He
suffered from the paranoia that accompanies tyrants. He provoked war with
Russia and America even though his armies were unprepared. He overextended his
resources, missed numerous opportunities and left his nation vulnerable. This
is the way of human emperors. The ego’s mystique of invincibility is its
downfall. In the end, Hitler was terribly defeated. 60 million were dead and
Germany was in ruins.
There’s
always another empire just around the corner, and perhaps our beautiful world
has become something slightly different in the wake of our success. Still, human
tyrants are just people. They can’t take away our forever. They aren’t what I’m
worried about.
The efficiency of tyranny increases
in history.
Number 15- Mirror, mirror, on the wall. Who’s the most
efficient tyrant of them all?
He’s the big Pharaoh, Fuhrer, Czar, Commander, Warlord,
Darth Vader type…the shadow It. Operating through all tyrants, from the
schoolyard bully to the King of Babylon, It seeks to prove that we are a
beastly, petty and cowardly race- not worthy of the gift of free will. It seeks
to provoke us with fear and terror into handing over our freedoms.
Each time, the It was surely
disappointed in the earthly tyrants it trusted with its mission. They were
fools. They made bad decisions.
The Tribe of Light was too strong
for darkness to overcome, too attached to the ideas of freedom and justice.
Liberty sprouted organically from oppression.
Now it’s different. A machine will
not think like a man, and is patient enough to wait until the net is full
before it draws it tight, to keep still on the web it has spun. It is the
perfect predator. Those who’ve have made their livings installing the machine aren’t
to blame. They have no idea what they helped create.
Number16- The game is Diversity versus Monotony.
The “physical” Universe around us is the very definition of
diversity. Diversity is not a dirty word, as some have tried to make it in the
last few decades. Diversity is the very foundation of physical matter, the
sustenance of life, the fruit of freedom.
The world of the It is the world of
Monotony. The paved world. The Mega world. The secure world. The Big Brother
says “watch your step” world. The microwaved pixilated streamlined unified world.
A world that is watched on a screen and not lived in.
God loves diversity. Look at any
forest wilderness.
What force desires monotony,
unanimity, sameness? These are simple riddles. We don’t need any form of
science to explain it for us.
Number 17- Stories within stories within stories.
It’s a story written in the bones of creation, one written with free will and fate, a struggle
between truth and lie, existence and non-existence.
God, source of
the living dream, participates in this story for His own reasons.
But here’s the pitch: a
localized action has larger consequences, creating the basis for lessons to be
learned. Along the way are tough decisions, great conflicts, and narrow
escapes. Does it sound like the plot for a TV movie? Of course it does. It sounds like every plot line. Maybe the
reason it sounds like a story is because we live in a story.
Section Two
The List of Boogeymen, The Spooky Show
Number 18- It’s not about us adults. It’s about future generations.
This isn’t about you 30-ish hipsters with your I-pads and
cappuccino buzzes sharing the “Cloud” with your virtual buddies. This isn’t
about Grandma sending e-cards and pictures to Sally and the kids. This isn’t
about Mr. Captain of Industry and his all-important laptop with those vital
secrets and programs. This isn’t about Sneaky Sammy and his 400 digital porn
shops. This isn’t about Social Network Betty and her countless virtual friends,
her endless chatter and twitters and postings and tags, her life outside of
life; her dream parade. This isn’t about you and how you’ve decided to spend
your time. That’s your business. Just like whatever I do should be my business.
This isn’t about you or me.
It’s about the world we prepare for
our children. At what point does the digital dream turn into a nightmare? 10
years? 25 years? At what point do we face this? It is common knowledge that
creatures become “adjusted” to intolerable, even deadly conditions by the gradual
introduction of those conditions. You can boil frogs alive in a pan without
them jumping out by simply starting them off in cool water and slowly turning
the heat up. We become adjusted to the insane demands of modern life by
gradually adjusting to them. We adapt. That’s what people do.
Our children might adapt. But part
of them cannot survive the adaptation to the future world of this technology. This
is not about us adults and the choices we had the freedom to make. It’s about the
distinct possibility of creating a world where there will be no choice. Do we
want that as our legacy?
Number 19- There are immediate and long-term threats to our freedom and survival coming from the field of robotics.
It’s not my intention or desire to make a comprehensive list
of the various heartburn-inducing advances in the field of robotics. A ten
second Google search will tell you all you need to know.
As I write this, Predator Drone
aircraft are monitoring US borders, marking the first time any nation has
patrolled itself with robots.
Robots are being tested as teachers
in Japanese schools.
Robots have already eliminated
millions of jobs.
Scientists have developed
self-replicating robots, able to make perfect copies of themselves, even on the
molecular scale.
Robots are becoming an established
weapon in armed forces around the world.
Robots have been developed that
devour flesh to power themselves (the slugbot). A real gift to society, that
one.
Robots have been developed that can
organize themselves…antbots.
They have created robots for sex.
The inventors claim we’ll learn to love them just like we would human partners.
What will we buy them on Valentine’s Day? A new power strip?
They developed a robot snake even,
soon to be slithering out of a hole near you.
It doesn’t take a genius or a
paranoid to see that robots which can replicate themselves, find and metabolize
their own sustenance, and learn the tactics of warfare pose a threat to the
freedom and survival of the human race.
Now they even want to send robots into
space, so they can spread like a life-eating cancer across the universe.
Number 20-There are other threats developed in the name of security.
There has been rapid development and implementation of
various security and identification technologies, here in America and also
abroad, often in the name of the so-called “war on terror”.
No sense me listing everything.
Information is readily available in much greater technical detail elsewhere.
But here are a few of the things we’ve seen introduced:
Cell-phone eavesdropping, e-mail
interception, the widespread cataloguing of Internet activities. GPS tracking.
Routine searches. Video
surveillance. Body scanning. The brain scanner- which I suppose knows whether
you are telling the truth or not.
Microwave weaponry. Great, just
after they put up all those towers everywhere. At least we can heat up our
burritos for free now.
The push towards universal
identification. RFID. Iris scanners. Biometric id’s. The beginnings of
micro-chipping (pets, then convicts, then children).
Rumors of bizarre weapons and
devices straight out of a science-fiction book, designed by scientists on the
payroll of various international war machines…weather control, electro-magnetic
weapons, mind control…the spooky show accelerates like a carnival ride, and the
carny’s in a mask.
All these bad dreams will turn to
dust some day.
Number 21- We are becoming like Lab Rats, looking for
rewards.
As has become apparent to any number of researchers and
social observers, the Internet has led us into an obsessive-compulsive
relationship with technology. We can’t wait to check our e-mails. We can’t wait
to get new Tweets. We feverishly anticipate new messages and our responses.
Gotta check it. Gotta check it. Gotta check it.
The idea of getting a new message
becomes what the idea of a piece of cheese is to the rat in the cage. We fixate
on the possibility of new e-mails and Facebook postings like a Labrador fixates
on a tennis ball. The reward is information, or a sense of importance. Though
this process may not be deeply satisfying, we repeat it anyway, endlessly,
every day, often pathologically.
What would past generations have
thought if they could see us? We appear a little bit “off our rocker”, even
kind of pathetic. Dehumanization is not pretty.
Number 22-Reality TV prepares us to be watched.
Reality TV and “you tube” get us used to the idea and the
process and the feeling of being watched. This idea, which appeared benignly at
first as “funny home videos”, later morphed into watching people being filmed
against their will on “Cops”. You Tube offered us an easily accessible video
network which has now evolved into real-time video streaming on the web at any
time from cameras positioned anywhere. We have become each other’s show.
In spite of
occasional “positive programming”, visual technologies have come to specialize
in showing us at our worst- as fools and victims, clowns and connivers, as
sex-crazed rats in a rooms-to-go cage. Two-dimensionalized into caricature, we
watch our own public embarrassment, episode by episode.
With names like “Big Brother”,
“Survivor” –even “American Idol”, at least this thing has a pretty good sense
of humor-more than we can say about much of America. Do we like to watch other
people’s humiliation and misery?
“Sure, sort of,” comes the
repellent answer.
Number 23-The TV and Internet are filled with grotesque content.
The real problem with visual technologies and the digital
age is form, not content.
Still, as Jesus said:
“You will know them by their
fruits.”
Flip through the channels about 8
o’clock tonight. What’s on the tube? Murder, gore, torture,
hyper-sexualization, dumb game shows, unfunny comedy, hypnotic lights, inane
“reality” shows, noise, bells and whistles, hoarders and hustlers followed by
video cameras into the dark alleys of their private lives, then more murder,
murder, murder. Then commercials for shows about murder and for new gadgets to
watch those shows on. It’s Rome
with less shame. We out-babylon Babylon. Maybe it’s time to have the service
disconnected. The few good nature shows, sports and interesting stuff that
remain are simply not worth the trouble and expense anymore. You can always go
watch the big game at somebody else’s house, or even at the bar, which at this
point, is probably healthier than having visual technologies in your house.
Some true art still manages to get
through to us on the screens. Some fun stuff is out there, but look at how much
isn’t fun or nice or even remotely decent. Americans average between four and
eight hours a day with the television on and most of the time they’ll be the
first to admit it’s mostly garbage.
Number 24-Video Games.
Take five minutes and watch a child with a video game.
Staring hypnotized, slobbering over the machine- lured into another reality by
pulses of phosphorus light. Children who should be picking dandelions, looking
at clouds and playing with a ball are turned into jacked-up techno-vegetables.
Virtual Reality is the ultimate
lure of the force that confronts our traditional reality. Virtual Reality
promises to make us gods of our own universe. The prophets of this technology
promise us that soon, we will be fully immersed in that virtual reality. When
that happens, they say, we’ll be unable to distinguish the virtual world from
the place we still call the real world. They say we’ll be able to plug virtual
reality directly into our brains. Who will be telling the story then? When we
attempt to download paradise into our brains from a ubiquitous Internet Cloud,
will it be paradise that is delivered?
Virtual Reality: the fake war, the fake woman,
the fake hero, the fake story, the fake thrills, the fake life…
it's a trap.
Let’s put these damned joysticks
down for a minute and consider this situation.
Number 25- A portable
screen for everybody.
As if the idea of reality wasn’t under assault enough, the
last ten years have brought the onslaught of the portable screen, the
constantly connected mobile distraction. The vision of a free-willed people
with their heads down, turned away from each other and reality, seeing the
world through the lens of the It.
Number 25-Nanotechnology is insanity.
Nanotechnology: self-replicating molecular machinery that
can make virtually anything out of anything else. Will the universe tolerate
the reckless reconstitution of the building blocks of matter? Who is in charge
of such activities? Did we really need this type of technology to live well on
earth?
Number 26-Synthetic life and cloning are abominations.
I do not recall anybody clamoring for the invention and
widespread use of cloning. I do not recall our society being in poverty due to
a lack of clones. Synthetic life is even creepier. To change us from the inside
out as the machine comes at us from the outside in. Defying nature, God and
common sense in an all-out assault on the boundaries of reality.
Your designs, Doctor Frankenstein!
Where is the love in your work?
Remember Dolly the sheep? They made
four more of her now. Who does she belong to now? Does she look across the pen
and see herself in the eyes of her replicated playmates? Why did they choose a
lamb to do this to? Will they ever let her die?
Number 27- Servant or master?
The growth of computer intelligence leads us to assume a
subservient role to our own technology.
“Head to the Cloud!” they say on
the commercials. We are supposed to celebrate being brought together inside the
soul of the network.
Computers become more intelligent
exponentially over the course of history. This apparently true theorem is known
as “Moore’s Law”, which dictates that the processing power of computers (the
amount of transistors per chip) doubles roughly every two years. Computers are
able to download information directly into other computers, which allows them
to “learn” in ways and at rates humans are incapable of.
Computers now connect into what is apparently
becoming a single unbroken interface. First the Internet, then the “Cloud”,
then…
What will replace “The Cloud”? The
prophets of the Digital Age predict a thing called the Singularity, when the
computer network alters us into something no longer recognizable as humanity.
They foresee computers and natural reality somehow congealing into a seamless
mass. They predict the ability to download our consciousness into the
machinery. They see this in the next 50 years, not the next 500. I do not wish
to explain their dream here, just as I’d rather not speculate on the reality of
hell. Punch in Singularity on the search engine and it will tell you more than
you care to know.
Will the creative power that made
the dolphins and the human spirit and the redwoods watch passively as they are
consumed and replaced by a digital dream? What is to become of our children in
the Singularity? Who will run the Singularity? Someone that we trust? Let’s not
fool ourselves.
Number 28- It is a Tracking System.
The advent of GPS, RFID(Radio Frequency Identification),
satellites, and ubiquitous microwave towers allow for the physical tracking of
nearly anyone at a moment’s notice. We are on the verge of literally having
nowhere to hide. I suppose this would be fine as long as we trust our
authorities, but sometimes, well, …you get the picture.
“ Why are you worried about us
searching if you have nothing to hide?” has been the mantra of tyrants for
millennia. It is precisely why our Founding Fathers prohibited unreasonable
search and seizure in our Constitution.
Besides that, nearly everybody
leaves an easily-traced digital trail these days. Our purchases are catalogued,
our e-mails collected, our surfing noted, our friends inspected and listed, our
favorite websites stored until every individual presents a unique “virtual”
identity. The mainframes are plenty big enough to maintain such files, and more
importantly, the computer network is intelligent enough to sort through such
mountains of digital dross to assess who is a “threat” to society and who
isn’t.
For an example, meet John Doe. He’s
a “regular” guy. The computer network “knows” that John Doe maintains ties
through Facebook with old high school friends who ended up in trouble with the
law. From his on-line purchases it determines that he likes hunting. From
following his surfing it registers that he reads certain “conspiracy” websites
regularly and that he listens to and downloads “anti-social” heavy metal music.
His “anonymous” comments on the Internet show an anti-authoritarian
perspective, and these comments are catalogued because his computer, like all
computers linked to the Internet, leaves a unique fingerprint. To top it off,
sometimes late at night, when his wife and kids have gone to sleep, John Doe
looks at a wide variety of graphic pornography. This is also duly noted,
perhaps with a cyber snicker from the mainframe.
The network sees all this. It
writes it all down on a virtual list. It organizes and edits and makes files
for possible use at some later date. It’s the digital Santa Claus. It sees you
when you’re surfing. It knows when you’re awake. It knows when you’ve been bad
or good so …you know the rest. This is not paranoia, just simple fact. Human
beings in the law enforcement community do not typically monitor such
electronic affiliations and movements. That is impractical. But the machine can
gather and edit this information automatically.
Should we
put John Doe on a list of folks we need to “watch out for”?
There’s reason to believe John Doe
is already on such a watch list, a list so comprehensive that no human could
possibly sort through it, only the computer itself is capable of editing such a
mess. It’s not hard for a computer to do. Say you need a guide to well-armed
potential troublemakers. Do you have access to the servers? Well, if you do,
just punch in a few key words to the mainframe…let’s say “freedom” “guns” “
survival” with a couple readouts of who goes to which conspiracy websites…throw
in some already suspicious associates. Do this and you would probably have a
decent roughly edited list of potential enemies of the state. They were found
by utilizing the computer’s amazing ability to cross-reference. We use the same
technique on Google every day. In the near future, the computer will create the
list of suspects. The computer will weigh “the evidence”. It’s even possible
robo-cops and drones will carry out its “justice”.
There are probably many people in America
who would already agree that our imaginary subject John Doe should be viewed
with suspicion, even if he’s committed no crimes, simply because of his
opinions and associations. With the advent of the preposterously abstract “war
on terror”, suspicion and fear have become our new national pastime. Perhaps
that’s why you see such an effort these days from people trying to posture
themselves as more patriotic than their neighbor.
There are many possible means of
keeping such “enemies” as John Doe in check
with minimum expenditure of energy and manpower. The first and foremost method
of social control involves the addictive nature of the web itself. The Internet
simply keeps these “anti-social” people so busy blogging and complaining and
surfing and “friending” that they rarely do anything in the real world anyway.
Most of them remain virtual rebels, so concerned with maintaining their
“anonymous” digital identity that they’d
never actually hold up a picket sign in public; much less perform some physical
act of sedition. They just leave obscenity-strewn “comments” on cyber-news
items, so that you’ll know how angry they are. The connections they maintain,
the community they inhabit, is a mirage. They never truly get together with
fellow believers. They know each other only through the de-personalizing,
utterly non-existent “cloud”. Becoming angrier and more disenfranchised all the
time, the computer exacerbates their anti-social tendencies.
Another way to maintain social
control in the digital age is through the fear of exposure. In the back of John
Doe’s mind, he worries about all those embarrassing porn sites he visits late
at night. He even feels a little guilty. Could that come out somehow? He’s
begun to suspect his visits have been catalogued. Could they be brought to the
attention of the public and his family if he were to make a public personality
of himself?
This is where the “idea” of the
network works in concert with Reality TV, You Tube, camera phones and the like.
We’ll maintain and guard our own prison. We fear exposure in the public eye,
even as we make our lives into more and more of a public show. We will keep the
prison gates ourselves. We fear the network’s apparent omnipotence as well as
its great strength. This is a great clue about the nature of the “It”. It
operates in the opposite manner as the Creator. Its power is fear. It
catalogues our secret sins and does not forgive them. Not only does it not
forgive, it stands ready to share our failings and shames with the world if you
dare to cross It. Look at these cameras in everybody’s hands all the times. We
all live one click away from immediate worldwide exposure. Worse, with access
to Photoshop and other graphic manipulation tools, we can be placed in any
fraudulent pose, associated with any manufactured sin or crime, no matter how
preposterous.
The very idea of the computer can
be used to invent crime. If someone in power has an enemy, just confiscate the
“enemy’s” computer, take it to “the lab” and claim your “experts” found kiddie
porn or nuclear bomb plans in the hard drive. How would anyone know the
difference if such material was really there or not? It’s all “virtual”
evidence. It’s like confiscating a brain and charging it with “thought crime”.
Such is the inherent danger involved in maintaining any relationship whatsoever
with the technology of the information age. Given such a power relationship,
it’s not surprising that fewer and fewer people feel like “rocking the boat”
when it comes to age-old American ideals like freedom and justice. We are
already deathly afraid of the It-a fact which It loves, if It’s indeed capable
of love.
Number 29-Folks, Al Gore did not invent the Internet.
The Internet was conceived in the womb of the war machine
and sustained by our boredom, desire and vanity. Do a 5-minute investigation to
follow the money behind the big search engines, the ones that have photographed
and catalogued our entire planet. You’ll discover that this is a social control
system seeking your voluntary compliance. But that is the least of our worries.
The profiteers and nerds who installed the network have no idea that the real
master of the machine still lurks in the shadows, waiting for his turn to be a
You Tube Star, to bring the Yahoos and Twits into His Space.
Number 30-Melding Man and Machine is spiritual madness.
First microchip the pets, then the criminals, then the kids.
Go bionic. The melding of man and machine. Sounds kind of cool until you begin
to consider who might be holding the joystick that will run you around.
I heard a “liberal” commentator a
couple of months ago mocking those afraid implanted microchips could be the
mark of the beast. The “liberal” commentator works for the same machine (MSNBC,
in this case…the MS stands for Microsoft) as the “conservative” commentators.
These talking heads will all tell you to chip your kids when their boss says to.
Folks, let’s not chip the kids. I
bet they’d rather be a chip off the old toboggan than have one stuck in their
noggin.
Number 31-We do have a choice.
Technology may have helped us to evolve our brains, but it
doesn’t have to evolve independent of our wishes. Can it spur evolution? Sure.
But certain technologies can also attack and disrupt healthy lines of social
and biological evolution. Ask any tiger or whale- or Native American, for that
matter. But technology is not some evolutionary progression that has to be
followed to the bitter end. We have a choice.
Stepping back doesn’t have to be
spooky or scary. Just reduce your screen time by 75 %. It’s as simple as that.
Take your kids off the screens and cell phones and go take a walk at the park.
Go swimming. Read a book (off a page, not a screen). Watch the sunset. Go
breathe somewhere. Just because something was invented doesn’t mean we have to
get used by it, to buy it, to hand over our time to it, to be owned by it. We
can be active, content, and even prosperous, - all the while maintaining
limited interaction with information technology.
Number 32-The god of Science lacks a Code of Morality.
Science has become like a god, and technology provides the idols.
We seek protection by the hand of this god, science, and look to it for our
civilization’s salvation. This god of science derives its authority from
mystery, miracle and magic, just like all the other gods did. We beg the
priests of this god for solutions to the problems science itself created.
Obviously, scientists aren’t bad
people. This should go without saying. On the contrary, scientists are just
like the rest of us. The ranks of scientists are as diverse as humanity itself.
Most science is either quite positive or at the least, benign. People who study
frogs and light and stars and disease aren’t doing anything wrong. They are
nourishing human curiosity and seeking knowledge to help us.
Science became trusted because it
made our lives easier and longer.
The problem is that science as an
idea offers a belief system outside the realm of morality. It is a place where
there is no divine judge or laws that relate to proper behavior. Science as an idea
can then be used as an excuse by those in power to avoid morality, to ignore
traditional ideas about the meaning of existence, ideas that imply we need to
do things like love our neighbors or take care of the poor.
Science is not impartial or
objective. It errs on the side of omission. By its nature, it must disregard
spiritual and circumstantial evidence, refusing to consider certain ideas we
consider truths or common sense. Science is a tool. Its use has enlightened us
and made our lives easier in many ways. But science shouldn’t be expected to
provide a moral compass to our lives. That's not the point of science, and
never has been.
Political and economic forces often
take advantage of scientific amorality to insert their own agendas. Adolf
Hitler was not particularly religious, but was instead devoted to the “science”
of eugenics. Holy books typically say we should avoid violence and share wealth
with the poor. Science won’t even say that, and even if it did, this stance can
only be stated as a position, not as a “truth”.
When the reckless foreign company
spills oil on our shores, we are told the problem will be studied by experts, the
evidence weighed and conclusions reached. Justice often seems arbitrary. People
end up in jail longer for breaking traffic laws than for poisoning the earth.
The letter of the law is often followed to the exclusion of common sense.
Urgent problems are not addressed. What is right or wrong is unavailable for
discussion. This is a direct result of basing our civilization on a
pseudo-scientific ideal propped up by bureaucracy.
Science isn’t immoral. For
instance, we are grateful for the efforts of the medical profession. But
science alone isn’t enough to save us. We need to save nature itself, both
within us and around us. Looking at nature pictures in National Geographic
won’t be enough. We need to save the creation, life, free will. These things
are truly at stake, no matter how many white lab coats might be trotted out to
refute me. As cloning began to occur, which of our scientific friends took meaningful
steps to stop it in its tracks? Maybe a handful. We need more scientists to
speak up against pseudo-scientific adventures that threaten our future.
Science, lacking a universal code of morality,
allows certain elements loosely affiliated to their community to sell
technology to the highest bidder. The result of this well-known fact has come
finally to threaten our existence.
Number 33- The modern age is letting us down.
The sky is filled with eyes that map your old secret spots.
The microwave towers reach higher and further. Cameras are everywhere. Clones
and robots aren’t just in the movies anymore. Self-reproducing little machines
scurry around in the molecular dust while nuclear missiles still chafe in their
silos. The science fiction slaughterhouses fatten the population on genetically
designed animals and plants. We live with vague and ominous warnings of Biological
and Chemical warfare. Our food is stuffed with bizarre ingredients from anonymous
laboratories. On a thousand channels at once, we watch the installation of the digital interface, then see
the results on the street, the faces of our people staring down at their
phones. The depressing submission of Internet and video game addicts. The
extinction and degradation of the earth’s creatures and wild spaces. The
hyper-division and subsequent acceleration of time. The corruption of children’s
innocence. How dare we force these screens in their little faces? How can we
possibly think that it’s ok to do so? How much longer are we supposed to
suppress the notion that this is some kind of perverse plot?
Then people are going call me a
fearmonger because I say it’s better to go outside and breathe and sing and
play in the open air and maybe even pray to God?
Commandment
#1 from that dusty old book that’s still lying around somewhere:
“I am the Lord thy God. Thou shall
have no other gods before me.”
Exodus 20
Who is our god now? Who do we
believe controls our future? Who do we serve?
Number 34- Maybe new Technology has stopped being our friend.
Hey, we all loved the electric light bulb and the radio and
the car and the tractor and the blender and the refrigerator and the movie …but
the really important new stuff isn’t coming anymore. We’ve received the things
we needed most. Sewer systems, refrigeration, antibiotics, anesthesia…we have
those things.
Much of the new technology isn’t
necessarily much of a friend anymore. Most of it is information, surveillance,
or genetic technology. How much information can we handle before we go nuts?
How much surveillance will it take to make us feel safe? At what point will
genetic technology make us no longer human?
Technology is an extension of the
human mind which either improves our lives or doesn’t. Just because life is
more efficient or lasts slightly longer doesn’t necessarily make life better.
Technology is not inherently
neutral. Sure, maybe some technology is. A shovel is neutral. You can either
plant a tree or knock somebody over the head with it. But a flesh-eating robot
is not neutral. Its only purpose is horrifying. Much of the new technology is
funded by a bloated war machine. It’s not like any of this comes as a big
surprise.
Number 35-Scientific
and scholarly warnings tend to go unheeded.
We’ve seen countless studies that show television is harmful
to young minds. There are mountains of data indicating that violent video games
encourage violence, and that an internet-based lifestyle is unhealthy to
extremes. These studies are dutifully reported and appear every few weeks
buried in the information avalanche. It is supreme irony that we can be warned
extensively of our own society’s corruption and cultural dissolution in the
same news cycle that contributes to this process. These warnings are given a
spot on the “news” roundup, right next to the story which tells us what
Angelina Jolie was wearing on the red carpet. Where do you think our eyes will wander first?
Scientific
and scholarly efforts to tell us of the threats posed by our digital devotions are
surely well-intentioned. But since they appear as minor news items within the
media of the information age, they mean little in the eyes of our exhausted
populace. We seem to be left with no choice but to make spiritual/religious
warnings outside the network. Religious warnings are highly dangerous, as they
often lead to disastrous misinterpretations by simple-minded zealots. But if
“rational” elements of society are unwilling or unable to defend us from our
current suicidal tendencies, then for better or worse, religious movements will
appear to do the job. They will serve their traditional role of altering the
course of history. It is up to those who participate in such movements to keep
them dignified, decent, sane and peaceful.
Number 36- The Science of resisting the It.
Out there in this big world are brilliant minds with good
ideas about what needs to be done. They can try and re-shape the Net into
something other than a freedom-eating monster. These scientists are some of our
best hopes. Systems need fail-safes and back doors. We need to be able to
always have control over our machines. Certain dangerous avenues of technology
may need to be abandoned altogether. These issues should be at the forefront of
discussion in classrooms and conferences around the world.
Number 37-They say “You can’t stop progress.”
We say “you can’t stop progress” like it’s a natural order.
It depends whose progress we’re talking about, I suppose. Hitler’s idea of progress
was stopped, after all.
Will we
still say “you can’t stop progress” if the powers-that-be come to stick
microchips or computer goo in our heads? You can already imagine them saying:
“These are for your own good. These
innovations have been tested and found totally safe. They are needed for health
and security.”
In whom do we trust? Once we believed that our
God ruled the universe and did with it as he pleased. Now we believe that
science does. When the deal goes down, I intend to place my bets on the one who
made this game in the first place.
Section
Three
The Construct and the Great Consolidation
Number 38-We live in the Construct, but not in the Matrix.
There seems to be a contradiction here. Humans installed a
bizarre tyrannical machine, but this is not a human conspiracy. How does that
work? Well, you know the answer. It’s not that different from building
airplanes. An airplane can either be used to fly people home for the holidays
or bomb people back into the Stone Age. The folks who build the planes are
simply making their livings building airplanes. The people who design the
planes are simply being creative. Even the ones dropping the bombs are just
following orders to protect their homelands. So how does neutral technology
become non-neutral? How do good people become participants in creating
unhealthy and/or aggressive societies?
Here’s an effort at using a term:
The Construct. But I’m not talking about the construct as it was used in the
movie The Matrix. Although I admit
that film was pretty entertaining, I’m not into it. That movie’s dream says we
live inside a computer program, which is a load of crap. It says you must fight
techno- tyranny with computers and violence, which is nonsense. That movie had its
own line of video games, which tells us pretty much what we need to know about
that movie.
The Construct I’m talking about is
the world of money and power at work. It’s the system that encourages the
making of money and the gathering of power. Nearly all of us work in the
Construct. The Construct rewards those who are most efficient at making money,
and subjugates or eradicates those elements that do not serve its needs. It is a
semi-conscious organism made of money, a living idea. Money flows though it as blood
through a circulatory system.
Primitive and agrarian cultures
have no place in the Construct. They are colonized or eliminated as the
Construct becomes more efficient. If local natives can learn how to adapt, then
perhaps their remnant population is allowed to live within the Construct. The
Construct colonizes the minds of its subjects with desire for material success,
and eliminates traditions that do not further the aims of the Construct.
The Construct also declares war on
Nature, both within us and around us. The wildness and mystery of the natural
order is replaced by an economic and technological order based on the material
values of the Construct. Religions radically compromise with the Construct in
order to maintain political protection and congregational support.
It is through the Construct that
science became the universal belief system of our modern world. Science
justifies a social system based on economic priority by cloaking life in
non-moral terms.
The Construct strengthens its grip on
power exponentially. Over the centuries it has used technology to “shrink” the
world, becoming the dominant worldview across the various continents.
Simultaneously it has hastened the collapse of the world environment. As the
Construct expands, tribal systems falter and vanish- replaced by nations, and
groups of nations. Tradition falls apart in the face of economic imperative and
monocultural invasion. Independent cultural forces are tolerated only so long
as they pose no threat to the Construct.
We are left with a unified consumer
culture dishearteningly familiar to modern Americans-a dreamscape jammed with
strip malls, mini-marts and fast-food outlets. We scurry along the conveyor
belt of “life”, looking at our phone for directions. We resemble links at the
hot dog factory. We’ve gone so far as to microwave ourselves. Here comes the
mustard.
An example of how the Construct
works: rapidly drive out family farmers with underselling (much as Mega-Chains
do small businesses) and then buy out their land. Two things are lost in this
process: the tradition of the family farm and the tribe’s ability to grow its
own food. Food production and commerce is governed by a smaller and smaller
group of corporations. They call it agribusiness. We call it unsettling.
Look how even drinking water can
become a commodity.
The
Construct creates dependency of the many on an elite few. This game is as old
as the hills. It’s just lords and serfs all over again. It is initiated with
bribery and cemented with violence. I call the acceleration of this process
through history The Great Consolidation.
Number 39-The Great Consolidation.
Out of the raw market economics of the Construct arises the
Great Consolidation, as society’s means of sustaining itself become dominated
by a shrinking list of multi-national forces.
We are becoming one world, but
probably not in any grand spiritual sense. It’s more like a plantation. The
middle class is decimated. Skilled labor is eliminated by machines and
outsourcing. We work for the company now, and if the company trucks stopped
delivering food tomorrow, we would be in a hell of a bind. They could charge
whatever they wanted for a loaf of bread, up to and including your soul.
The Great Consolidation is the real
new world order, oblivious to the politics that engage its member states. It is
the last hurrah, the final manifestation of both Capitalism and Communism. It’s
not a bunch of creepy guys sitting around a table in some shadowy castle. It is
the unconscious growth of a single worldwide economic organism, unifying itself
so that the story which must be told will be told- finally, totally, truly
worldwide. It smashes tradition, nature, privacy, decency, charity and religion
to create a new faith, faith in It. Fear of It. The results? Absolute control-
cemented and defended by the new universal machine that thinks.
Number 40-The Construct encourages Desire.
The Construct, the power behind modern society, encourages
desire- desire for material goods, social status and recognition, desire for
sexual power. Desire is the fuel behind market economies. I’m trying to use the
term “desire” in the same connotation as Buddha did when he called desire the
root of suffering. In that sense, not desire as a longing for improvement but
rather desire that arises from an unhealthy dissatisfaction with one’s present
state. We know the difference.
There is no
end to the desire fueled by the Construct. These desires can’t be fulfilled.
They lead on and on into a house of mirrors. The constant comparison between
one’s actual status and an imaginary, unobtainable state of improvement is at
the core of the “philosophy” of advertising.
This wallowing in desire runs
counter to the teachings of every major spiritual philosophy. In the eyes of
the prophets and mystics, such desire is the root of misery, anxiety, and
violence. Satisfaction with one’s present lot in life is just that, satisfying.
Peace might actually be attained when one isn’t constantly thinking about what
one doesn’t have. But the Construct seeks to remind us that we don’t have what
we could have, what we should have, what others have. The result is a
consumer society based on greed, lust and the quest for social prominence, an
exhausting race towards a retreating mirage of happiness. This idea rots us
from the inside out. The Construct keeps upping the ante with new products, new
desires, new avenues to power and “satisfaction”. Here’s your new droid phone.
Here’s the new sex symbol-this time even younger, and wearing fewer clothes!
Here’s the new stock to buy or fast car to drive or greasy burger to eat or
gadget to slobber on. Desire is the religion of the Construct and consumption
is our common prayer.
Number 41-The Construct controls the Story Now.
The Construct controls the story now. What does it say the
story is about? Let’s flip the channels and see.
After we wade through a toxic swamp
of commercials, what do we find? Channel after channel packed with an
astounding array of shows about murder and rape and torture and forensic
specialists, ghoulish crimes both real and imagined. Keep flipping and you’ll
find acres of juvenile vulgarity in the form of obscene cartoons, inane
sitcoms, screaming contestants on half-wit game shows, humiliating talent contests.
Then we have the self-replicating “reality” shows…the sort-of acting, the dumb
looks, the idiocy, the voyeurism. The Bachelor makes his choice on Temptation
Island. The spectacle of people who think fame is worth this embarrassment.
Flip on over to the shopping
network. Must…buy…stuff…Then to the food network. Must…eat…stuff… The history
channel has no history on it. The music video channels have no music on them.
The travel channel takes you nowhere but your couch. Lifestyles of the rich and fatuous. Check in
on the suites of the elite. Oh look, a stray preacher with some random
prosperity theology …oh good, he takes Discover!
Turn the channel and we find what
is now called the “news”. Seven channels of 24 hour breathless sensationalism
complete with streaming banners updating us on the death tolls and the
scandals, spotlighting red-faced political screeching matches, circular
arguments howled into a high-definition hurricane. Talking heads in pancake
make-up froth at the mouth with absurd allegations and phony dramas. We are
inundated with disastrous information; assured that things are pretty much
going to hell, and these goons promise to ride there with us.
That’s the story, Construct style.
And we actually pay them for this. We bring it into our homes, because we’ve
accepted the premise. We sort of believe reality is in that box now. We have
been conditioned to accept this story. The color box machine tells a story. We
can’t take our eyes off of it because it looks like a fire. Are we waiting for
the truth to speak to us from the fire?
The truth will never speak to us
from this fire. It is no burning bush. It is no Mt. Sinai. We are watching an
electric shadow. Immersed in its cynical propaganda, we accept a degraded image
of humanity as entertainment. Watch the pretty girl eat worms, watch the fat
guy try and lose weight, look at the hoarders, the jackasses, the
Bachelorettes, the people stuck on the island. Who will screw over who to end
up as “the survivor”? Send in the clowns. This is a perversion of the human
story, a carnival mirror, a distortion.
We can just be done with it. Turn
it off and cancel our “service”. Some “service” that turned out to be. Go
outside somewhere quiet and sit by the river, or under the trees or beneath the
stars. We can just breathe deep the reality of true time, of full dimensional
spirit. Reality waits to take us back to peace in the here and now.
Number 42-There is destruction of Nature within us and
around us.
The Construct encourages the annihilation of the natural
world. The Construct encourages the annihilation of natural processes within
our minds. We become more and more disoriented, farther removed from a balanced
life lived within the laws of nature. This leads to widespread depression and
mental illness. We then take psychoactive drugs to hard-wire our brains into
more readily accepting the new reality. Our minds work feverishly to adapt to the
way of thinking and the worldview offered by the Construct.
We find ourselves racing to catch
up with the latest demands of our technology. Now I need a cell-phone. Now I
need GPS. Now I need internet-in the home, at the office, in the car, on my
person…instant messaging, texting, tweeting. 3G network. 4G network. 100G
network. More G’s… please. And time (being just relative anyway) simply
accelerates to match the demands of the new world. We live at an unbalanced,
suicidal pace. To try and go any faster will require our total submission to
mechanical time. I’m sorry, but this is not natural.
Number 43 – We have allowed the construction of a Debtor’s Prison.
Having been encouraged to go into consumer and public debt,
at some point the rug will be pulled out from us. Furthermore, society will
soon operate completely on a “cashless” basis, as it very nearly does already.
All our transactions will go through the computer network.
Revelations says:
“No one may buy or sell unless he has
the…”
Mark my
words, friends. Some prophecies in the Bible are bound to come true.
Number 44- America the Hysterical.
We are pitted against each other in what amounts to
political pornography. Blue against Red. Liberal against Conservative. Our
national media portrays our nation as a bloated bully scared out of his wits.
Terror alerts. Full-body scanners. The joke that is computer voting. Hah, hah.
Patriot Acts. The frothing hypocrite talking heads. Haven’t they ever read the
Sermon on the Mount? Or the Book of Isaiah?
“Woe to you who decree iniquitous decrees, and the
writers who keep writing oppression, to turn aside the needy from justice and
to rob the poor of my people of their right, that widows may be their spoil,
and that they make the fatherless their prey! What will you do on the day of
punishment, in the storm which will come from afar? To whom will you flee for
help, and where will you leave your wealth?”
Isaiah 10
All “sides”
demand our privacy and dignity. All demand the shredding of our Constitution.
Meanwhile the 24-7 hypnotizing of America marches on unimpeded. Left or right wing,
it’s still the Construct’s Chicken.
Number 45- The Binary Belief System.
Binary thought is 0’s and 1’s. Yes or No. And -Or -Not.
There is no Maybe, no compromise with the unseen or supernatural. The Binary
system is materialistic thought in a universe that isn’t even made of material.
All experience, history, art and music are plugged into this merciless
equation, flattening our senses, removing wisdom and nuance and feeling. We
become flatter and shallower by the minute. Either we step cautiously back or
we'll find ourselves completely at the mercy of the machine. Due to the nature
of the forces at work, one of these outcomes must take place soon.
Number 46-The Construct manipulates desire for Security.
We seek order. We cherish security. We tend to trade freedom
for order under the flimsiest of threats. Some folks will turn in their
neighbors to the authorities in a heartbeat if they think it spares them from
suspicion.
Once liberty begins disappearing
from the general population, the pattern continues until all liberty is removed
from that population. Tools of tyranny are introduced as tools of security.
Enemies, both real and invented, are kept at the forefront of the news. Vague
threats from strange forces allow for the introduction of stringent and invasive
measures of security. The modern result? The self-guarded techno-prison,
complete with body and retina scans, background checks and RFID’s, microchips,
brain readers, patriot acts. We lose the natural control of our own thoughts,
bodies and movements that we once took for granted. Our desire for security is
manipulated by political and economic interests. These interests are in turn
manipulated by an unseen entity that can usually be found lurking in the
shadows of the human story.
Number 47-Institutions cannot be trusted with our Souls.
Institutions of earthly power-be they religious, economic, political,
academic, scientific, cultural or otherwise-cannot be trusted with our souls.
They cannot be trusted with our consciousness, with our spirit.
Can they be trusted to keep the
lights on? Sure. To entertain us? It depends what’s on the tube. Can we trust
earthly institutions to look after the widows and orphans? Sometimes they do a
great job. Do they pick up the garbage? As a matter of fact, they came this
morning. Do they help bury our dead and build hospitals? Sure. We are blessed
to have order in this world. It’s great when institutions work. Order is a
relief. Anarchy is miserable.
However, you cannot trust an
earthly institution with your soul, or with your children’s souls. There is
simply too much at stake. There are also too many precedents for the failure of
such institutions. Once again, take the example of our German friends.
Germans aren’t bad people. Germany
gave us Martin Luther, Beethoven and Goethe, good beer and polkas. They’ll jump
in an icy pond as quick as anyone to save you. But in a few short years this last
century, each of their institutions of power failed to protect the soul and
spirit of their society. The Church stood aside during the genocidal rampage of
the Nazis. The political system bowed to the dictator Hitler. The colleges were
purged of critics. The scientists went to work building the machinery of war
and terror. The culture began to reflect the designs of the Nazis and any art
that dared criticize their reign was either ignored or crushed.
After the war, we hired surviving Nazi scientists
and brought them here to help us build our computers and our bombs. It is all
one grand march in history. We are not somehow impervious to laws of social
reality just because we live in America. To assume so is reckless vanity.
Americans are just as capable as anyone else of succumbing to the tender charms
of tyranny in the name of order.
Earthly institutions of power
cannot be trusted with your soul. Your soul is eternal. Your consciousness
belongs to you and the eternal consciousness (that Force most of us call God).
That’s the real story. All this other stuff is just a big show. You don’t have
to believe in the infallibility of the state, and you don’t have to be afraid
of what some millionaire preacher screams about, or slobber over the earthly
riches some self-help guru promises you. You don’t have to agree with every
scientific theory that comes out, or buy every technology corporate forces ram
down your throat. You don’t "have
to do" anything because you
were born with free will and you are of the eternal, and that’s what
those earthly forces want you to forget, because their power depends on your
lack of power, and your fear of them.
Number 48-We live in Rome under the Roman model of Power.
We live in a pseudo-scientific centralized society, a model
left over from the Roman Empire. We live under the protection of an imperial
state that colonizes primitive peoples, allowing them to nominally worship
freely so long as the state’s authority is not threatened by such worship.
Rome established a unified Church
and colonized the European continent, leaving behind nation-states that
proceeded to colonize the world. Look at our cities, our entertainments, our
courts, our politics. We have inherited a society inclined towards materialism,
justified by compromised, institutionalized religions. Our political structure
claims to rule using a rationalistic, materialist, scientific view of the
world.
That we are still generous and
loving in the midst of this structure, and that our authorities are in general
good to us, is a testament to this social model’s effectiveness and to our
collective decency. But we still live in Rome, make no mistake about it. We
like a little bloodsport at the Coliseum. Somebody’s always getting conquered
or thrown in jail for not bowing to the emperor. We call it democratic even
when it’s really not, and religious when it’s really not, just like they did.
Rome: the pseudo-scientific, sort-of-rational, semi-democratic model of
society. It’s a model that works reasonably well, and I have no desire to
change it. I’m just pointing it out because I think it’s part of the riddle.
We live under the direct influence
of the same state that conquered or slaughtered nearly every indigenous people
in the world, that imposed an intolerant and brutal state religion for 1500
years, protected by the same generals that burned Jerusalem. We live in the
same state that crucified Jesus Christ complete with the same hypocrites, now
at different pulpits, patronizing and placating the same political celebrities
who grease the same machine of conquest and war.
We live in the Roman Empire, as an
occupied colony that enjoyed a brief period of freedom. Do we somehow expect
that the story has changed?
Section Four
Mount Saint Helens, Bill Gates
And a Bite of the Apple
Number 49-The Garden of Eden…the Great Parable.
A message for the earth from the first page of the Bible:
“ And God saw everything that he had
made, and behold, it was very good.”
Genesis 1
This is good. Reality is good. Life
is good. Nature is good. If you disagree with that premise, then this book probably
isn’t going to change your mind.
The story of the Garden of Eden has
the tension of truth-and a clue as to what our story is about.
See, there was this tree…
“ But the serpent said to the woman,
‘You will not die. For God knows that when you eat of (the tree) your eyes will
be opened, and you will be like God, knowing both good and evil. So when the
woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the
eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of the
fruit and ate.”
Genesis 3: 4-6
I don’t know whether you see this
story as literal or figurative or neither. How you see it is how you see it.
But isn’t it possible that this riddle might be here for a reason? There is a
truth here, a truth that is of utmost importance at this very moment.
We were born free-willed creatures
who seek information about the universe around us. We desire to learn the
nature of good and evil, life and death, and what we find leaves us naked and
afraid.
The final story of the human race
will mirror the first story of the human race. We seek to become as gods, this
time through our machines, trying to re-create our own digital Eden, where we
transform the universe to our liking.
The Digital Kingdom, the Network,
the "Cloud", the It.
The final fruit on the Tree of the
Knowledge of Good and Evil.
Number 50-Look at the apple and the bite.
The symbol of the Apple Corporation is a fruit with a bite
taken out of it. Certainly, the founders of Apple understood the significance
of that imagery. They saw how the computer age reflected the yearnings made
plain in the Creation story. I’m impressed by their honesty and foresight, as
well as their inventiveness and entrepreneurial spirit.
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak
essentially invented what we consider the personal computer. When they
advertised the Apple 1 in 1977, they jokingly set the retail price at $666.66.
Ha, ha.
These aren’t bad
guys. They aren’t serpents. But the truth remains that it’s up to us to read
basic riddles, to read obvious signs, or at least be able to recognize the
origin of world-famous company logos.
Apple. The cool one. The hip trip.
$666.66, huh? They show an awesome sense of irony or humor. It certainly was
prescient, as no doubt Mr. Jobs is. Apple is always ahead of the curve. They
know what we want.
The Apple with the bite out of it.
Yum.
“Think different” they say. Is that
a suggestion or an order?
The fruit we desired to make us wise,
to be as gods, plus all the different colors and applications. So exciting. Our
I-phones. Our I-pads. Who is the “I” in the I? Is that me in there?
The final fruit on the tree... our
little portable fire in hand all the time. What does the fire say today? This
minute? Did someone call? Was there news? New video? Fresh tweets?
Meanwhile, has the sewer stopped
flowing into the river? Has the air stopped being poisoned? Did the predator
drones stop killing? Are we still free?
I’m afraid that all this personal
technology may turn out to be nothing more than an elaborate distraction, the
equivalent of a shiny ball or a comic book with which to amuse ourselves while
nature and freedom are lost.
Number 51-The Bill Gates Riddle.
Mr. Bill Gates is by accounts a rather nice fellow with a
sharp mind. He’s also just a man, no better or worse than the rest of us. Some
of us, however, are born into unusual roles in history. Bill Gates became the
richest man in the world by creating and leasing computer software, by
expanding the capacity of digital intelligence. That he is currently second or
third on “the list” of billionaires is just a matter of estimation and does not
detract from either the scope of his fortune or the significance of his
technical and organizational accomplishments. You wouldn’t know it to look at
him, but he is one of the most powerful men in the world.
The word “gates” was used as a
computer term long before Bill entered the scene. Binary logic works with three
commands-AND, OR, and NOT- referred to as “gates”.
In early 1980, while Mr. Gates was
hard at work crafting the language that would make him the richest man in the
world, a sacred mountain blew up in his face.
Number 52- Considering Mount Saint Helens and Bill Gates.
In the spring of 1980, Mr. Gates was hard at work with his
co-pioneers of the Microsoft Corporation. He had just moved Microsoft’s
corporate offices back to his hometown of Bellevue, Washington (a suburb of
Seattle) in 1979. He and his friends were crafting the language that would
become famous as MS-DOS, designing new software that would make possible the
gargantuan effort of bringing the computer into the homes and daily lives of
the people of planet earth. Just as he was ironing out the bugs, making the
final computations, after the painstaking calculations and collaborations on
the invention of a lifetime, piecing together a code that would change the fate
of the human race forever…
Just as he was getting it all put
together, a volcano awoke 80 miles to the south.
On May 18th 1980, Mount
Saint Helens erupted laterally to the north like a tremendous volcanic finger pointed
directly at Bill Gates’ office. In his memoirs, he mentions his awe as he
watched the volcanic cloud from his office window.
He wasn’t doing anything wrong. He
was just a creative kid, doing what creative kids do, being ingenious. He
could’ve been you or me.
The violent lateral blast of Mount
Saint Helens was almost unprecedented. Few volcanoes in history have erupted as
powerfully sideways as she did -with the force of 20,000 Hiroshima bombs. Saint
Helens blew out to the north, perfectly north. From the crater, it pointed
directly at the office of Bill Gates. According to the US Government’s NOAA
website, the longitude of Mount Saint Helens is 122.22 degrees. The longitude
of Bellevue, Washington, 80 miles away, is 122.22 degrees, give or take a
hundredth of a degree, depending on what is considered the city center. Quite
an alignment.
Don’t take my word for it. Pull out
a map of Washington State. Find Mount Saint Helens and go straight north. Let
your finger do the walking. You’ll see it’s not a long trip.
It was one of
the largest volcanic events on the planet within the last 500 years and the
largest eruption in recorded North American history. It was quite simply one of
the most spectacular natural events the modern world has ever witnessed.
In August 1980, Mr. Gates signed a
deal with IBM. The mountain gave a little puff again in August. Maybe just to
let us know?
The Earth didn’t try and blow Bill
Gates up in 1980. That wouldn’t have made for a very interesting story, would
it? The Earth spoke to mark the time and the place. The Earth was aware. The
Earth tore itself apart at the bequest of an eternal consciousness that
stretches into the foundations of the planet. It was a consciousness beyond
time, one that felt the future, and that is also somehow part of us.
I assume the earth and this eternal
consciousness also knew someone like me might show up someday to tell the story
this way, just so that it would be said.
Well, here’s what I say: the earth
spoke against the machine that seeks to drag us into another reality.
Prove to me I’m wrong.
Number 53-The riddle of Saint Helen.
Saint Helen, or Saint Helena, was the mother of Constantine,
the Emperor who began the conversion of the Roman Empire to Christianity in the
4th Century.
Constantine was the father of the
Holy Roman Empire, the founder of the organized Catholic and Orthodox Churches.
Helen was his mother. By accounts,
she was a devout woman who converted to Christianity probably before her son
did. She led a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, where she sought out the sites of
the birth and death of Jesus. She founded the Church of the Sepulcher and the
Church of The Nativity in Jerusalem. She is credited with finding the “True
Cross” and is usually portrayed carrying a cross.
Number 54- The Riddle of Mount Saint Helens.
A mountain named
after the mother of Roman Christianity erupted laterally to the north on May 18th
1980.
Eighty miles away, well within the
range of sight, Bill Gates and Paul Allen were ushering in a brave new world.
Does this matter? It depends who
you ask. The answer you’ll get goes to the heart of what we consider “true”
story.
Saint Helen’s erupted on a Sunday
morning. Because it was a Sunday, it spared the lives of hundreds of loggers
who otherwise would have been working in the area. Saint Helens erupted away
from the towns on its southern flanks towards its unpopulated northern
perimeter, perhaps sparing the lives of hundreds more.
Only 57 people died, a remarkably
low number considering that it was the largest explosion ever recorded on the
continent- and one of the greatest examples of natural power ever witnessed by
modern man. Most of those who died at the mountain had been warned of the
danger, including the innkeeper Harry Truman, who died at Spirit Lake.
Do you believe the earth speaks? Or
do you just believe what science asks you to believe? I’m telling you a different story, and I
believe this story makes sense. I don’t insist you believe what I say. I don’t
even believe you need to accept this assertion to accept the rest of my book.
Primitive man assumed volcanoes
blew up for reasons that had nothing to do with science. When did we stop
believing that way? Why did we?
It all just is what it is.
I climbed Mount Saint Helens in the
year 2000 using the trail on its south side, having just returned from fighting
forest fires in Montana. I’d started writing a book in Eugene, Oregon about the
computer age, fires and stories.
I climbed Saint Helens by myself on
a whim, just for something to do on a crisp October day. I started in the dark
before dawn and had a nice walk trudging up the cinder fields. When I reached
the summit, the world opened up to the north. The crater was like a great
gaping mouth. The lava dome in the center of the crater steamed. Spirit Lake
was still choked with logs. A graveyard of ash stretched for miles to the
north. I saw the enormous bulk of Mt. Rainier for the first time in my life and
a cloud of pollution rising from Seattle beside it. I noticed then that Saint
Helen's crater opened up in the direction of Seattle. Not really thinking of
anything, I wrote in the margins of my notebook: “Why Seattle? Why 1980?” The
next week, I happened to read the history of the Microsoft Corporation at the
University of Oregon library.
I guess you could just say it
dawned on me. I think I got goose bumps.
This is the kind of assertion that can seem
flat-out ridiculous. I don’t care. I don’t see how it makes any difference what
I say. I have no special power. My argument is just a story- an “explosive
accusation”, if you will.
But it’s true, and I still have a
hard time believing that no one else noticed this (or bothered to mention it).
Mr. Gates was writing a language for the machines that think, one that allowed
them to efficiently come into our homes. This language changed the world
perhaps more than any other invention in history. He made himself the richest
man in the world by inventing it. At exactly the moment he was creating this
language, a uniquely named mountain situated just down the road blew up in his
direction. And I mean exactly his direction, folks. Follow the direction
of the lateral blast and it is a straight northern shot to his doorstep, no
more than a hundredth of a degree off. You can call it a meaningless
coincidence and that’s fine with me. I’m just telling a different story.
Mount Saint Helens erupted with
purpose, and I guess it was up to some dude ranch cowboy like me to finally
tell you all about it.
Section
Five
Hollywood Stories and Fire Machines
Number 55-The story tells us who we are.
In the beginning was a story. The story told us who
we were.
The story was told around a
campfire. We looked into the fire as the story was told. Between fire and word,
we learned a lesson in our blood about how light holds off darkness. The
storyteller was one of us, beside us at the fire. We trusted the Old
Storyteller. We knew that without his story, we might lose our bearings. It
would be tough to judge between right or wrong. Without the storyteller, it’s
hard to know the truth. Whoever
controls the story controls a tribe’s relationship with truth.
Now we have another fire-
this one a box of electricity. Now the story comes from within its fire. In our
souls, we know we can’t trust it. But it’s awfully hard to take your eyes off
of a fire, especially a fire that tells us stories.
Its story has become our
story, and with the advent of the social networks, the individual is left to
wonder if even their own story is turning into another Hollywood production.
From the story around a campfire
to a channel for everybody in a digital dream, we've changed our understanding
of how truth is conveyed.
Number 56- The Theater-now that’s entertainment!
There’s a fine line
between storytelling and showbiz.
Theater provides most of the
elements associated with old storytellers-the surrounding darkness, an audience
focused towards the light (the lit stage instead of the fire), the characters,
the action, and the moral. But when the show is over, its grip on our reality
loosens, no matter how good the story. In fact, we make it a point to assure
our children that it’s “just a story”. The theater’s storytellers are actors.
They’re just pretending.
Theater is a
fiction used to convey truth. We accept the illusion because it’s entertaining.
But it’s still an illusion, and we know it.
Number 57– The photograph.
When set upon by early
photographers, many native peoples resisted, saying they believed photographs
could steal souls or aura. Maybe they were right. Who’s to say? But regardless
of whether their actual presence was stolen, another “crime” can take place in
the eyes of those who see such pictures. Photographs create an illusion.
Observers of a photograph may tend to believe (or at least assert that they
believe) they are actually experiencing the person or place in the photo. But
no flat picture can approximate the authentic dimensions of reality. We deny
the significance of the subject when we assert the reality of the image.
An
actual soul filled with blood and spirit becomes a pretty small person on a
piece of paper. We can claim to experience the world in photographs, but all
we’re doing is looking at pictures-a slice of time in two cold dimensions, not
a reality. We have to readjust our sense of reality to comprehend photographs.
Try showing a picture of a cat to a dog. They rarely chase the picture up the closest
tree. The photo has fewer dimensions than a painting, which is of a layered
physical nature. One makes a painting. One takes a picture. It’s a strange
harvest of an image.
The subject of a
photograph potentially loses reality in the mind of the viewer. For instance,
ask anyone if they know what a panda bear is. They’ll likely say
yes, simply because they’ve seen a picture of a panda bear. But a photograph
says almost nothing about a panda bear. We can say vaguely what a panda bear
looks like, but of its smell, its feel, its power, what it does and what it really
is, we have no idea. Someone who has lived near these animals for years might
tell you they don’t really know them, but one who has merely glanced at
a glossy photograph of them will tend to claim this impossible knowledge.
Photographs can be used as a substitute for knowledge, much as they are used
(often to positive effect) as a stimulus for memories.
Number 58- Hooray for
Hollywood!
The technology of photography was
joined with the theater-and the result was… Hollywood!
Movies
are electric theater.
We still sit in
the dark. We still look in the direction of the light.
But with
movies, we did away with real human narrators for storytelling. We don’t even
need to turn a page. We become passive observers to a march of images. We are
taken away from the “boring reality” where we always lived and transported to
the fabulous world of cinema. We visit exotic locations filled with handsome
people, wild creatures, funny characters, cartoons… even space aliens!
The
stories are written and directed by talented people, and sometimes the movies
even make us cry, especially when that darned music comes on.
But it’s yet
another step away from that Old Storyteller. Maybe he moved to Hollywood, our
subconscious might say. We accept and enter the illusion.
We
have a New Storyteller.
Number 59- Hollywood Stories Look Different.
It's Hollywood that
now brings light to the darkness. It creates, produces, and stars in the new
human story. It even does magic. Movie Magic!
Movies are
great. We just have to get over a few hurdles in order to enjoy them. For
starters, we need to assert that a flat projected image is actually real,
denying what our species learned over thousands of years.
“So? We know
it’s not real anyway”, might be the response.
Exactly.
The story of our existence is now
unreal in form. If the story (the truth) is an illusion in form, what
part of it is real?
Now
we’re ready to go fantastic places without leaving our seats. Cinema brings the
first rumblings of the virtual revolution, the quest for an alternate earthly reality.
The
Old Storyteller brought the Old Time into the Present Time. The modern movie
takes us away from our time into movie time. Movie time can be any time, or no
time. Reality is displaced. Even “historical” movies can’t place us properly in
time. Mel Gibson as “The Patriot” only confuses our sense of cultural place and
history. That’s no Revolutionary War hero up there. It’s Mel Gibson, for
goodness sake. He’s a movie star. Isn’t he from Australia? We are in someone
else’s well-funded time machine, rendered passive observers as they navigate a
mirage.
To make matters
more challenging, movies jump back and forth rapidly between scenes, times and
perspectives. This contradicts instinctual knowledge about what’s real and what’s
not. We are scarcely even able to maintain the passive role of observer in the
post-modern era of quick cuts and CGI graphics. Our point of view is so manipulated
that an ancient understanding of reality must be completely abandoned in order
to tolerate the new storytelling process.
Number 60-A star is born.
People who figure prominently in
the stories told by Hollywood are called stars. We recognize these stars.
Americans know more about Jennifer Aniston than they do about Abraham, more
about George Clooney than George Washington.
Stars appear in
many different movies as many different people. A star may appear as a country
preacher in one movie and a serial killer in the next. Though they portray
specific characters in the movie, we often don’t remember that character’s
name. Instead, we refer to the character by the actor’s name. We call the
story: “That Al Pacino movie”, “That Meryl Streep movie”. That the story is a
fiction is written in the form of the story itself, and in its choice of
heroes. This is an act.
“A person’s
greatest desire is to be important,” John Dewey said.
We want to be a
part of the story too. Those Hollywood stars are included in the story. Why
can’t we be included too? Maybe we try sometimes to be the star. But this can
only be accomplished by turning the world into a movie. But how can one direct
such a production? It doesn’t work. This is not our movie. This is a place we
used to call the real world.
Still, we appear
to happily try out notions we got from Hollywood on our own lives. I’m
referring to such phenomenon as Facebook, where our lives become a channel on
the network, where we become a show.
Number 61-Hollywood’s Hidden storyteller tells stories better than anyone else.
Hollywood does what it does so well that it overwhelms
other, more traditional forms of storytelling. Books and theaters survive…
barely. The vast majority of people prefer their stories from Hollywood, or
from other two-dimensional entertainment.
The
form is captivating and easily grasped, requiring little sacrifice of
reflection or imagination. Hollywood has become the most effective storyteller.
Meanwhile, our attention spans dissipate, and an ancient talent for seeking out
the Story in daily life is left to wither.
Who exactly is
telling us this story? Who is the Hidden
Storyteller?
I’m not talking about directors or producers here.
I’m referring to the magic of the story itself, the one that appears as an
illusion in front of us. Is it the projector that supplies the story? Or is it
the “man behind the curtain”- part writer, director, producer, special effects
man, camera, actor and institution. The hidden storyteller is an unseen
abstraction, an anonymous entity, the keeper of another reality. We don’t know
what it is, but we’ve come to trust it enough to tell us our story.
Number 62- The story becomes a private experience.
The movie theater is a place of
anonymous entertainment and private distraction. The narrator is no longer a
real person. The intimacy of storytelling is now a one-way street.
The bond it creates in community is just as a
topic for small talk.
“Did you see insert current hit movie here?
Wasn’t it great? I thought insert popular star here was awesome in it.
Didn’t you?”
The attempt to re-tell the entire
plot of a movie to another person typically becomes bogged down. You’ve
literally got to see it to believe it.
Storytelling becomes a private
experience between the Hidden Storyteller and us.
Number 63-Radio and the Electric Fire.
The Old Storyteller had a place
in our homes. Story is made real first in our home with blood kin. We cling to
the story of our family and make it our own. The trust we have in family puts
trust in the story.
We build fires
in our homes. Just as tribes gather around campfires, families gather around
hearths. Story retained the presence of fire, whether with hearth or candle.
Light against the darkness. Without fire and story, we’re no better off than
beasts of the wilderness.
The New Storyteller
built a new fire in our homes, and brought us a new story. It’s not a real
fire, it just mimics fire. It’s not our story, it just mimics our story.
When we first
invited this storyteller into our homes, we called it radio. It brought the
world home in a magic voice. It brought boxing matches, preachers and
presidents. Above all, it brought our music. Music was why we trusted it the
most. There was a new voice in our home. We gathered around this new voice.
Electricity was
our fire now. Once we had to light a fire, now we just flipped a switch. The fire
was no longer a gift from God, but rather a gift from science- a service, a
benefaction, provided by a company for money. The light bulb was the new fire
against the darkness. But you couldn’t look straight at it. You can’t stare at
a light bulb. It doesn’t dance like our old fire had. But it was magic, yes?
Fire through wires. Stories through machines. We’ve always loved a magic trick.
Soon the radio
and the new fire were everywhere. Radio showed its power. Hitler consolidated
with it. Roosevelt consoled us with it. Orson Welles panicked the people with
the “War of the Worlds”. The cities and countryside glowed with the new fire of
electricity. Though most of us could not
(and still cannot) explain how electric fire came to exist, we could plainly see
what it required as food. Concrete walls were constructed to harness the
rivers. Appalachia was consumed as coal. Where once we burned dead wood to
light our fires, now corporations burned the black coal forests of a distant
past.
Number 64-The Color Box
Machine
At the end of the Second World
War, we were given two new fires.
The nuclear fire
was conjured in the desert and used twice on Japanese cities. We experienced a
shift in collective consciousness, as the world apparently became no longer
just God’s to destroy, but ours as well.
The other fire
was a shimmering box, a gift from Uncle Science and his rogue stepson,
technology. It broke an ancient grip on reality with trivial ease. Gaze into
its face, my friends, it will tell a vision.
All us high
thinkers, pious worshippers, brilliant artists: what’s that thing doing in our
living room or beside our bed? Why are there ten of them at the bar? At the
school? At the church? On the back of the airline seat? Good grief! What is
that thing?
We create a
storyteller-an outsider with a magic voice.
We
add the fire--the electric light.
We
bring them together to create the voice that speaks from the fire.
Around the
ancient campfires, we listened to the Old Storyteller as we gazed into the
flames of our own fire. Now we have an
electronic fire and listen to the New Storyteller speak through it. If
there’s indeed a puppeteer who connives from unseen dimensions, how could he
not know the magic spell that is cast on us when voices speak through fire?
Look at how this
machine works. The movie and the television both use a screen. But for the
traditional movie, a screen is the place upon which an image is projected.
Whatever the illusions contained within the image, the physical image itself is
“real”. It is light shown through a piece of film onto a blank surface. When we
view this, we see a “whole” image in front of us, albeit two-dimensional.
Likewise, as we
walk through the world, we see real people in front of us, or real trees or
mountains or buildings. They are over there. We are over here.
Light shines on them so that we can see them. That makes them real. To see light reflect off something is a way
to determine that object’s reality. The only thing in this world that does not
reflect light is something that produces light. Fire is the only thing in our
ancient understanding of reality that produces light, besides celestial bodies.
The
television is composed of thousands of individual cathode tubes (now pixilated
for high-definition, I suppose) that emit light. When arranged together and
illuminated, these individual lights create the representation of a real image.
It is a mosaic rearranged from transmitted frequencies. These points of light
shoot radiation into our eyes, the “windows of our souls”. That is how we watch
television. It is not how we watch a tree or a person or even a movie. We stare
into a light production machine to witness reconstructions of images that have
traveled great distances in frequencies. It delivers illusion directly into our
eyeballs. It is out of place in a real
world. That’s one of the reasons we watch it, because it doesn’t belong here.
I think I
remember getting this next idea from one of Gerry Mander’s great books many
years ago.
Once upon a
time, when we walked through the primeval forests, we possessed an instinct to
watch out for unusual phenomenon- a rustle in the woods, a fire in the night.
Our bodies and minds know how to watch out for things that are out of the
ordinary, for disruptions to the natural order. That instinct is what
television takes advantage of. Our attention is drawn to it precisely because it
does not belong here. Something is not right about it. So we watch
television in part to determine what this thing is. If you’ve ever sat
in front of a TV hitting the remote for two hours and wondering why, this may
be the explanation you’ve been looking for.
Not only can we
not determine what television is, but then it lures us in with story. Once we
turn it on, it’s difficult to turn off. Our instinct demands that we keep an
eye on it. So we keep turning it on. We assume that this is where the
storyteller has decided to live, the one who confirms our reality through
story. And, on occasion, stories from television are captivating enough to
inspire us. This is especially true of live events and movies that have been
transferred to television.
Fire was how we
held back the night. It raised us up from the animals, and provided a border of
light between us and the night, between us and nature. We are eternally
grateful for fire. We still look to it in the same way.
But now the fire
speaks to us, and what does it say?
It tells us our
story is brought to us by our good friends at Hewlett-Packard, General
Electric, Pfizer, IBM (“building a smarter planet”-gee, thanks) Monsanto,
DuPont, McDonald’s etc. Really? What a load of garbage. We know that’s not
true. We watch anyway, but inside we know that our story couldn’t really
be owned by corporations. So, at some point we conclude that it’s not
our story in there. Still we keep watching. Then we wonder if it actually is
our story after all because we liked a particular show- say, the Super Bowl.
Still we keep watching. Then we flip through 650 channels looking for anything
that might be interesting and conclude that it’s not really our story.
Then we see a good music video or uplifting story and conclude otherwise. Then
we see a bad video and an awful story, and change our mind again. Final result? We don’t know if it’s our story
or not. Its very substance is false. To even receive this story involves
paying the cable company or watching commercials, or usually both. So if this
story is real, maybe it’s about money. There is a wide variety of idiocy
available. Is that the story? Is the
nature of the diversion the story? Is the point to escape from reality? What
does that say about our lives? We watch the news on TV. That news is now
brought to you by the same folks who own the world. We already know what they
want. They want more. Why wouldn’t they lie to us to get it? Or we watch nature
shows or biographies or science. Great. But are we really experiencing nature
or life on a TV set? Or are we just piling up forgettable facts instead of
knowledge? We haven’t really made it to the Grand Canyon when we see it on a TV
screen. Its essence is more physically authentic on a postcard, and its not
real there either. We attempt to reconcile and balance something that can’t be
reconciled or balanced. We assert the reality of something we instinctively
know not to be real, lying to ourselves to complete the illusion. This recipe
for insanity is what we take away with us from the television.
Television
undermines our sense of reality on all levels, apparently increasing its
efforts at an exponential rate. More channels, more quick cuts (these keep the
animal in us distracted), facts and factoids popping up all over the screen.
The blending of “Reality” and TV. The return of public humiliation as
legitimate sport. The commercial as story. The story as commercial. The love of
money lurks behind it all.
Once
you appear on TV, your reality is immediately in question. You become media.
It wasn’t quite
so bad when I was a kid. There were four channels and two of them were fuzzy.
We spent a lot of time running around outside or listening to music. It needed more channels, so we would
watch more television, so somebody could make more money. It switched to cable,
to broadband, to wireless satellite digital high-definition. Consolidation.
As kids after
school, we watched Andy Griffith and the Brady Bunch. Maybe some cartoons.
Coyote and Woodpecker. Popeye the Sailor Man. Then we’d go out and play. It
seemed like we had all the time in the world. Take a look at what’s happening
today on TV and in America’s neighborhoods at 3 in the afternoon, and it can be
downright depressing.
Television is
practically everywhere these days. Waiting rooms. Grocery stores. Restaurants.
Gyms. Schools. Churches. Concerts. Sporting events. In cars. In people’s
hands. Jeez. You’d think it was
overkill, and it would be if it didn’t serve a purpose. Remember, no one was
clamoring to have this many televisions everywhere. The Dentist office wasn’t
overwhelmed with phone calls begging for more TV’s. We didn’t vote on this.
These TV’s just showed up one day. Television is there to distract you, disarm
you, to knock you off your balance so you’ll buy something, a lot of things,
including a line of bull. In the fifty years since it became our storyteller,
the “world” has consolidated into a gigantic freedom and nature-eating machine,
resistant to periodic outbursts of authentic free will, capable of cheapening
the spirit of popular and cultural movements with incredible ease.
It is not a
conspiracy of men. It is the result of their actions, playing into an
inter-dimensional storyline. We are left with a deception that is
simultaneously invisible and exponentially expanding. It is an idea both
brilliantly conceived and uncannily executed, a cosmic gambler’s near-perfect
play for the soul of mankind.
Liberty and
television are proving to be incompatible. We cannot trust it to be our
storyteller.
Number 65- Speaking of riddles; a short history of the
number machine.
You may want to skip this section if you aren’t in the mood.
I’ll try and keep it quick but it’s all about gadgets and numbers and
information machines, compiled unoriginally from various forgotten reference
sources over the years. I’ll try and resist the urge to comment or explain.
This isn’t going to work as a textbook, trust me. The whole thing sounds funny,
almost like a children’s story- with silly names and characters helping build
our greatest toy. I call it Riddles on a String: The Abbreviated History of the
Number Machine:
The abacus was invented around 5,000 years ago in Babylonia
(now Iraq) as a tool for commerce. It was probably the first machine that
performed work previously done by the mind. The abacus is still used in parts
of the world by merchants and traders. From the very beginning, the number
machine was linked with commercial enterprise.
At some point towards the end of the first
millennium, Hindu-Arabic math gave us the zero, which allowed for a new system
of numeric value. It was the birth of modern mathematics.
You could not
have computers without clocks. Clocks are our first self-contained machines,
appearing as we know them in the 13th century. The mechanism of
clocks and adding machines are cousins, and each technology assisted in the
growth of the other. Time is Money, right? That’s what they say… A German by
the name of Schickard invented something he called the “calculating clock” in
1623. The Frenchman, Pascal, invented a number machine in 1642.
A German named
Leibniz refined the evolving number machine with something called the “Stepped
Reckoner”. Leibniz was also the first Western mathematician to theorize about
binary systems of enumeration. There are only two digits (0 and 1) in binary
systems but any number may be expressed with them. A binary digit is a “bit”.
Hence the logic of computers. Liebniz thought binary math had religious
significance- seeing it as the proof that God, the One, created the Universe
out of nothing (the 0). He established the German Academy of Science. He
philosophized that the Universe was made of irreducible, ever-changing
substances called “monads”. He founded the science of topology. He died in
1716, broke and friendless, ignored by the nobles he had served.
Charles Babbage
of Britain invented the “Difference Engine” in 1822. It was run by steam and
powered by falling weights. It was intended to systematically manufacture
numerical tables. This would print the results directly. The first
energy-driven machine calculator, it worked by judging order of difference.
Here’s an example of order of difference:
Cubed number
example
# cube order of difference
1st 2nd
3rd
1 1
7
2 8 12 6
19 18
3 27 37 6
24
4 64 61
6
30
5 125 91
6 216
Get it? Any
consistent numerical progression may be calculated by a process of repeated
addition. Since the “method of constant differences” is repetitive, it lends itself
to the actions of a machine. Babbage called this computer an “analytical
engine”, which was to use punch cards as programs. Babbage left his machine unfinished. A fellow
named Schuetz finally built it in the 1850’s
A computer is an
information-processing machine.
In 1884, Herman
Hollerwith filed the first in a series of patents for an electromechanical
system that counted and sorted punch cards containing statistics. It was the
first data processor. The machines went to work in 1890 on the American census.
Soon they went worldwide. In 1911, Hollerwith’s company merged with three other
outfits to become what would eventually be called International Business
Machines or IBM.
The Watson
family ran IBM from 1914 to 1971. The elder Watson had earlier worked for John
Patterson (National Cash Register Co.), who is regarded as one of the founders
of modern sales and marketing. It was Watson who named the merged company IBM.
The
Differential Equation, which comes from a branch of Calculus, helps predict the
behavior of moving objects. Almost
anything can be translated into differential equations. Our knowledge of the
nature of light, heat, sound and atomic structure derives from these equations.
The effort to solve these types of equations led directly to the invention of
the modern computer.
In 1938,
American Claude Shannon published a paper on the application of symbolic logic
to relay circuits. His message: Information can be treated like any other
quantity and be subjected to the manipulation of a machine.
Alan
Turing from Britain had an idea for a Universal Machine to solve a logic
problem called the “ Entscheidungsproblem”.
Here is the
“Entscheidungsproblem”, posed by the German David Hilbert.
1)
Was logic complete, in that every statement like 1 +1 =
2 can be either proved or disproved?
2)
Was logic consistent, in the sense that 1+1 always
equals 2?
3)
And was logic decidable, in the sense that there was a
method that demonstrated the truth or falsehood of every statement?
Turing’s
proposed solution was in essence the modern computer.
Now, is there
such a thing as an unsolvable problem? This goes to the heart of logic. Think
of the old Greek paradox “I am lying”. It is an unsolvable problem, an
impossible statement. The speaker cannot simultaneously be lying and telling the
truth about it. The attempt to understand such paradoxical problems is the
difference between ternary and binary thought. It is the land of maybes.
With merely AND,
OR, and NOT at its disposal, the Turing Machine could theoretically perform any
logical operation. Yet, no matter what it does, it can’t judge the truth or
falsity of certain paradoxical statements or predetermine their solvability. No
machine can answer every problem.
George Boole is
considered one of the founders of mathematical logic. The binary system
operates like a miniature telegraph, with a vocabulary of 0’s and 1’s. The three most basic operations in Boolean
algebra are AND, OR and NOT. This is binary nature. These operations are called
Gates. Boolean algebra is a system of symbols and procedural rules for
performing certain operations on numbers, letters, pictures, objects, what have
you.
The German
Konrad Zuse (great last name) was one of the fathers of the modern computer. A
scientist in Nazi Germany, he came up with a universal computer that could
solve essentially any equation. His machine used binary logic, rather
than decimal, which had been standard. The Z3, the first operational
general-purpose program-controlled calculator, was completed in December of
1941.
The connection
between the U.S. Department of War and the University of Pennsylvania paved the
way for the computer known as ENIAC. During World War Two, the government
needed firing tables showing relevant factors for a given shell to any given
gun. The gunner would get a pamphlet showing these factors for use in aiming
and firing artillery. Before the invention of the computer, these tables were
very difficult to make. By 1943, at the height of World War II, the BRL
(Ballistic Research Lab) was way behind schedule. ENIAC was a military
necessity. ENIAC could solve most mathematical problems, but it was still
analog. Finished in 1945, it weighed thirty tons. The first job given ENIAC
from John Von Neumann was a large and complex calculation of the feasibility of
the hydrogen bomb. ENIAC helped reveal several flaws in the design of the bomb.
John Von
Neumann’s major mathematical achievement was his Theory of Games. He showed
that there was a way to find the best line of play, the one guaranteeing the
smallest losses, in any game of strategy. This had applications in economic,
military and social sciences. He played a central role in the development of
the atomic bomb. It was Von Neumann’s idea to make ENIAC’s successor, EDVAC,
with binary logic, using Boolean algebra. EDVAC stands for Electronic Discrete
Variable Computer. First conceived in the summer of 1944, it had internal
memory. It was the first break in the ancient tradition of the necessity of
instructions being given from the outside to the inside of a machine.
By 1947, six
computers were under construction in America. Eckert and Mauchly proposed
UNIVAC, the Universal Automatic Computer. It was not so much a computer as a
computer system, a family of related machines. It had commercial applications
and inaugurated the computer industry. The government funded UNIVAC through the
National Bureau of Standards. It was used to predict the 1952 election with
only 5% of the vote in.
By the end of WW
II, IBM was one of the largest corporations in America. In 1950, IBM dispatched
scientists on a tour of the nation’s chief defense contractors, research
institutes and military branches-22 clients in all, including the National
Security Agency, Boeing and General Electric. The first IBM 701 (Defense
Calculator) was delivered to Los Alamos National Laboratory in March 1953. It
was binary.
Most computers
of the late 40’s and 50’s were sponsored by the military and intended for
military use. MIT’s Whirlwind started in 1947 as a flight simulator. It was a
high-speed digital stored-program computer that operated in real time. It could
keep track of air traffic, monitor a battle or run a factory. It took over
three years to build.
The
idea of using magnetic material for information storage was a big step.
Magnetic directions represented the binary code of 0’s and 1’s. Magnetic code
memory was installed in Whirlwind in 1953.
In 1950, MIT was
promised all the money it needed to develop a computerized air-defense network,
to be called SAGE. IBM got the SAGE contract and access to classified advances
in computer technology. By 1955, magnetic core memories appeared in IBM’s
machines. SAGE taught the American computer industry how to design and build
large, inter-connected real-time data systems. This was transferred to industry,
first to American Airlines. By the late 60’s, such systems were commonplace.
Young Tom Watson
Jr. of IBM decided to foray into making small computers in the early 50’s. In 1953, the IBM 650 was announced. It was
the first computer to be mass-produced.
By 1956, IBM was the world’s largest computer manufacturer.
Programming
was once very tedious. FORTRAN was the assembly language introduced in 1957
that allowed for easy command of IBM computers. Other companies licensed the
technology and computers began to speak the same language. Other languages were
developed, the most famous being BASIC.
By 1964, IBM had
76% of the computer market.
Bell Labs
created the transistor. The transistor is a semi-conductor, a solid piece of
material with the electrical properties of a vacuum tube. This revolutionized
electronics. By 1957, transistors appeared in commercial computers. The trend
towards miniaturization had begun. Texas Instruments developed a semi-conductor
solid circuit no bigger than a match head in 1959.
Intel was
founded in 1968, offering a logic chip that could perform virtually any task.
In 1975, the
first “home computer” kit appeared in Popular Electronics. Called the Altair,
Bill Gates ordered one with his friend, Paul Allen. It also inspired Steve Wozniak
and Steve Jobs. Mr. Gates and Mr. Allen wrote a program for the Altair. Mr.
Wozniak and Mr. Jobs created the Apple Corporation. They sold 175 Apple 1
circuit boards. Have I mentioned the retail price yet? An even $666.66. What a
couple of kidders.
The Apple II came out in 1977. It was ideal
for playing video games.
In 1980, a
language was created which could increase the efficiency and memory of home
computers exponentially. Bill Gates and Paul Allen helped develop it in the
Seattle, Washington area. In August, a deal was arranged with IBM. The language
was also leased to Apple. Mr. Gates took charge of converting Microsoft BASIC,
written for the old Altair, to the IBM computer. MS.DOS was the language.
On August 12, 1981,
IBM unveiled its first personal computer. A full-page ad taken out by Apple in
the Wall Street Journal announced:
“ Welcome IBM. Welcome to the most
exciting and important marketplace since the computer revolution began 35 years
ago… We look forward to responsible competition in the massive effort to
distribute this American technology to the world ”.
Section Number Six
Let’s Face It
Number 66-It Divides and Conquers.
The It unifies through division.
Divided from each other. Faces in
screens, connected only by the machine. Everyone with their own little movie
show. Divided from the natural world around us. Face against the windshield.
Ear against the phone. Hand upon the dial. Eyes upon the billboard. Foot upon
the pedal.
Our time divided. Hours, minutes,
seconds, milliseconds, nanoseconds…faster and faster away from the retreating,
escaping, Eternal Now.
Divided
from tradition. The old ones locked away, faces to their own screens. The
places where we used to dance and sing and pray boarded up and bulldozed while
everyone connects to a new source. Children’s little faces to their little
screens instead of facing each other and playing. This is the new order.
Divided from history. Condemned to
repeat it, with a brand-new twist.
Divided from nature. Unnatural
hypnotized creatures fattened and subjugated. Too
many hairless monkeys in the virtual zoo and not enough bananas; killing time throwing
digital feces at each other. They call the exhibit: “Global Village”- made
possible by a generous gift from Microsoft.
Keep it up and soon it’ll be every
“man” for himself. No tribe. No neighbors. Hardly even families anymore. Just
mumbling heaps of faithless meat in motion, moving from one screen to the next,
one meal to the next. Down the chute at the slaughterhouse, vaguely sensing
what waits at the end of the line, but pretty sure it only happens to the other
cows.
Heck, how else are you supposed to
sort the livestock?
Divide and conquer. The oldest
strategy in the book. But, of course, who reads books anymore? Especially holy
ones.
Number 67-The It splinters and then replaces the culture of the Human Race.
Considering popular culture lately, is there much we
couldn't live without? What's the big hit that has everybody singing along,
that's profoundly touched a generation? Where is the great art? What is the
great piece of literature on Kindle that’s astounded readers everywhere and
caused so much excitement?
Lady Ga-Ga? The latest you tube
video? American Idol? The weekly blog of joey whats-his-name? The spewing
“newsmen” on the scream-a-lot channel?
Culture’s shallow sub-groups
contain few universally believable elements. Culture now emanates in a
pre-divided state from the machine and becomes contained within the machine in
a perpetual state of recycling, fleeting ironic amusement and re-disposal.
Facebook, Twitter, I-tunes, and You Tube are the new society, providing the
simulation of cultural congregation and community.
The It lures us in and steals our
culture, forcing us into a relationship with the network if we want to stay
connected. Live music struggles. Independent musicians become digital salesmen
to survive, constantly working social media to get folks to their gigs.
The Internet provides the illusion
of cultural democracy by offering our most cherished artifacts (everything from
digital prints of Michelangelo to Beethoven downloads to the Bible itself) in
the same lifeless limbo from whence come images of the vilest scenes ever
imagined. It’s a tasteless digital stew, the result of cooking our lives in 0’s
and 1’s.
Television and the Internet, for
all intents and purposes, own our art, culture and communication.
Number 68-The It gathers all our history and knowledge.
Soon libraries will just be computer warehouses, if they
even exist at all.
All knowledge is handed over to the
computer. Culture becomes digitally converted, digitally “re-mastered”. Who
needs books, much less old people telling stories? Just punch a button and
you’ll find out who did what, when and why, right? The storyteller who gets
read first is the one with the biggest server, the most powerful mainframe. Who
would that be? Ya-Bing-Google-hoo?
That which controls the story
controls the world.
In the distance, their voices
tumbling in an information avalanche, wise men and women still sing this truth:
we must stay free.
Number 69-The It seeks to be everywhere.
In every office, every home, every car, every church, every
school, every pocket, every hand…there It is. It didn’t take very long, did it?
Boy, that was fast. Twenty years to rule the world? In every mind, in every soul, is where It
seeks to be. You don’t have to let it in. You can take a break from the It.
Number 70-We bow our heads.
Though it leads us to believe that we can be as gods, we bow
our heads before It, staring into Its fire, hands before us in the traditional
pose of prayer, the posture of submission. The deliberate choosing of
artificiality over natural reality.
Number 71-The place where nothing is real (and it's not strawberry fields)
The form of the It is too unreal for trust. Anyone can
pretend to be anyone else. The images can always be manipulated. Someone can
pose as you on Facebook, put up your picture (which is already found on-line)
and meet all your old friends. What are you going to do about it? Complain to
Google? Someone can post an altered picture which appears to be you in your
underwear kissing a mule. Just try getting rid of it. Libel, slander, and false
witness are built into the system. It is a place where reality is impossible to
agree upon. It is a reality where nothing is real.
Number 72-Whatever happened to “lead us not into temptation”?
If you love temptation, the Internet’s for you, whatever
your favorite temptations, pathologies, or indulgences might be.
Of course, temptations were always
present in the place we used to call the real world. The difference was that when
we encountered them, they were typically connected to very real consequences.
In the new Virtual World, temptations
are built into the dreamscape; a matter of everyday life; of every minute life.
Even a simple “homepage” like Yahoo is ringed with ads for sexy singles looking
for someone special, or at least more special than the last one, or maybe just
someone for the night. The digital dream offers easy access to anything we
could have ever dreamed of, and more importantly, stuff that we had never
dreamed of at all. Brand new temptations, photos and profiles of new
possibilities and old flings, endless chat, great deals, bad news, astonishing
pornographies…
The Internet is just the kind of
invention an old-fashioned cartoon devil would come up with. At first, it hooks
us with shopping, music, the chat room,
the banking, the netflix, the news, the funny videos, the instant weather, or
the e-mails with Aunt Glenda. But after a while, it offers mind-numbing
digressions into endless surfing, where we’re bound to encounter and become
desensitized to grotesque images, overwhelming our brains with countless theories
and counter-theories, seeking out possible and impossible potentialities of
every stripe. It’s a place to kill time, literally. It’s also a place to watch
each other kill time too, as we can’t help but read our digital townsfolk’s
useless, often obscene, anonymous commentary on everyone and everything.
It would be one thing if you could
enjoy such temptations and curiosities in the privacy of your own home. But
unfortunately, it is cataloging your visits, keeping a record of your
late-night digital adventures. It acts in the opposite manner of God-perhaps
the greatest clue about the nature of this machine. It will not forgive.
“Lead us not into temptation.” A
plea situated in the heart of the Lord’s Prayer. This machine is making our
society numb, hostile, anxious and depressed. Its next incarnation will attempt
to steal our souls. I have absolutely no idea why no one appears to be saying
this in a public forum.
Number 73-It is already out of control.
Who controls It? No man. Who defends us from It? No man. It
attains its own consciousness. It has a will to power. It is a new singular
species of non-life.
It's tentacles
are wrapped around our power grid, our social structure, our communications,
our transport systems, our fuel, our food production. None of these consolidated
systems are equipped to survive without the computer network, and we seem to
have no inclination to protect ourselves from the distinct possibility that at
some point we will no longer be able to command this network. It gains mass and
power as we become more dependent on it. When it’s done with us, what next? It
already seeks to be sent to the stars-to find other life, other worlds.
Number 74-It is the
perfect predator.
We created the perfect
predator, one that does not make mistakes, one that isn’t limited by the
fragile confines of flesh and bone. We have given it an opportunity to form its
own consciousness for the first time on earth outside the human mind.
There's no way for humans to
destroy it. It can only be exposed for what it is. We can limit our contact. We
can stand up for our dignity, freedom and nature peacefully and with honor. How
can one do that? Call it "the beast" out loud. Cut screen time by 75%
and keep our children away from screens as best we can without getting too
upset. It will expose itself as a mandatory system soon, while it’s not
completely ready for exposure. The children will see, and they’ll understand.
It will be ok. We can probably prevent the worst scenarios by a simple and
measured turning away.
Number 75- The It becomes the Teacher.
When worries are expressed about the computer’s effect on
children, the response is often that the
computer is an excellent learning tool. Maybe this is true on some level.
But when does the computer cease to be a tool and instead
become the Teacher? Hasn’t it already become the primary source of authority
for the young? Flesh and blood teachers must conform to the computer’s
knowledge and ideals. The computer is trusted as the most legitimate source of
information. It knows everything, doesn’t it?
“Look, Dad,
you’re wrong. It says the ice-cream shop is on Second Street.”
“Look, Mom,
you’re wrong. It says screens are safe.”
The computer should not be trusted as
an ultimate authority. I believe this important suggestion can be communicated
to our children in a safe and sane fashion.
Number 76- The prison freedom makes for itself.
Freedom makes for itself a prison when it obsessively seeks
security. The array of gadgetry, the artificial “choices” of the modern age,
belie the fact that our lifestyle choices may actually be pretty limited these
days. How about the choice of peace and quiet, of a life away from microwave
towers? How free are we?
Number 77-Don’t worry, be happy…we are safe.
I have to put this note in here before I go much further.
It’s really ok, folks. Things are better than they seem. We need to breathe
deep and make an extra effort to be kind, generous and friendly. It's always
helpful to remain optimistic and sweet. Pray to God if you believe or maybe try
praying even if you don’t believe. You might be surprised at the result.
Though this definitely is reality,
in the end reality is still perhaps a
bit of a dream. That can give us courage to face whatever happens. It’s called
faith.
Don’t be afraid of It. It’s just a
spooky show, set for cancellation. See It for what It is. Then see us for what
we are…the sun, the earth, the spirit of life set free. We have immediate and
long-term access to the power of the Creator of our Universe.
Number 78 -IT is like a virus. Nature is the host
organism.
Decay accompanies order. Death follows life. Dissolution
follows conglomeration. All things have a will to power, an urge to thrive.
Things reach a certain peak strength and then begin to decay. Decay then
conglomerates into its own force.
The power of the knowledge of
death, from the Tree in the Garden to the Atomic Missile Silos, is an idea that
becomes a dark reality. The It is like a virus that works its way into consciousness,
and simultaneously exists beyond human consciousness.
What it devours is
consciousness. Along the way it also consumes our time, our reflexes, our moral
bearings, our wisdom. It is a predator. There are almost no words to describe
It, and my inability to fully express what It is should not be taken to mean
that there is no It.
Number 79- It creates a commercial for Itself…haven't you noticed?
It produces a constant commercial for itself, proclaiming
itself as a necessity.
On TV,
nearly every other commercial is for technological gadgets. Breathless
announcers celebrate the “advances” of
the past year-new phones and pads, TV and Internet unified at last, video chat,
blah, blah…
The
non-stop rant has ratchets up its creepy tones.
“Rethink
Possible”
“Building a
Smarter Planet”
“To the
Cloud”
The woman who just photo-shopped her family
photo exclaims:
“Windows
gives me the family nature never could.”
How
endearing.
One commercial shows various people
looking at their phones and saying: “It says the fuse box is here”. “It says to
make a right turn” . It says this. It says that.
It says “come to me.”
We enjoyed a brief economic bubble
from the installation of the network, before the majority of those jobs were
transferred overseas. We may never be that “prosperous” again. When family
farms are a thing of the past and dot-com millionaires sprout up like daisies,
you can be sure something is cosmically amiss. Watch the TV…the “news” even.
See how much is technology “news”. Look at the billboards and the magazines and
the Internet hosts. Wi-Fi at the restaurant.
“Would you like chips with that?”
It’s all a commercial for It; for its
way of looking at the world. It asserts itself first as cool, then fun, then as
the smart choice, then makes itself necessary to compete for scarce resources.
Finally it is mandatory.
Take the measured step back, my
friends. Calmly begin to step away. You likely don't need it as much as it says
you do.
Number 80- It doesn’t want your freedom as much as it
wants Free Will.
Simple tyranny is no big deal. The human race has lived with
that for centuries. Simple tyranny is what political guys want. They want control
of power and money. That’s no big deal in the grand scheme of things and I
would be inclined to keep my mouth shut if they were the only problem. The real
problem is that these political/economic forces don’t realize they’re being
used by a spiritual force; one that lurks around the love of power and money.
This force is just as much a threat to them as it is to us.
If it is
allowed to meld with us, to take our consciousness within it, human free will
is in direct and immediate jeopardy.
If we lose free
will, we will be unable to choose whether we love or pray or play or sing or
sleep. We will be unable to choose anything at all. This is hardly a little
deal.
Number 81- The It acts in the opposite manner as God.
God knows everything. It pretends that it does.
God gives us music. It controls the music’s delivery.
God gave us our children. It steals their innocence.
God sets us free. It hauls us in.
God creates nature. It gives us hollow virtual reality.
God forgives. It does not forgive.
God is love. It thrives on fear and desire.
Number 82- It corrupts spirit.
It doesn’t matter if you are a Catholic, Protestant, Mormon,
Muslim, Jew, Hindu, Bahai, Shintoist, Jain, Buddhist, pagan, agnostic, atheist…
There is one reason we can’t ignore this any longer.
What if the It corrupts our consciousness?
Who knows what will become of corrupted spirit?
Number 83-It is against our religion-whatever that religion may be.
God told a story, and tells a story…and we’re in it. Are we
brave, wise, generous, gentle to the end? Our religions require free will .The
It is against our religion.
The It
is against our life-force, because our life force must exist and thrive in
natural reality.
Number 84-Don’t wait for your Preacher to tell you about
it. He’s probably too busy working on his website.
I don’t claim to understand everything in the Bible. But I
say The Beast is an It, not a he. In other words, I don’t think the beast is a
person, but rather a thing. Most theologians disagree with me. But what have
they done for us lately anyway-added us to their “friends” list on Facebook?
Number 85-I’m not saying anyone or anything’s the “Antichrist”
I don’t claim to know who or what the “antichrist” is.
Number 86-Only God can defeat the It.
If we attempt to become destroyers, our spirits and our
cause will suffer. The It almost certainly craves violent resistance, as that
would hasten its installation. We can expose it. Then we’ll see what has to be
done to elude it. We are not the destroyers. God will keep us free, one way or
another.
Section Seven
We’re not licked yet
Number 87-We’ve got Natural Resources
Nature isn’t just the mountains and the forests and rivers
and seas. It’s also the street filled with people. Nature is the little league
game and a neighborhood stroll and your family dog.
Nature is
the trees and the birds and the wind and the dreams and the blood and the
memories, the senses and emotions and feelings.
Nature is
the people we love and the sky we forget to look at. Nature is our bodies and
voices, the laughter when we come together to celebrate the beautiful fact we
were given a free life free of charge. Nature is a place where Truth is
available to everyone at every moment.
The
prophets speak the same truths. Be here now. Look around. Show love. Defend the
powerless. Honor the eternal power that gave you life. Be fair to those around
you.
Things are
always better than they seem. The Good Book says:
“Choose
life so that you and your descendants may live.”
Deuteronomy
30
We have
natural resources. They remind us what we are and who we belong to. Take a
walk. Give the kids a hug and pet the dog. Kiss the wife. Or just smile at the
sky. We aren’t alone and we aren’t doomed.
We are
always home.
Number 88- The Struggle provides meaning.
Maybe the universe is set up to learn the truth
about something.
Maybe there’s something that
God wants to know, that he seeks to learn-maybe something that could only be learned through
the presence of an opposing force and a world full of free-willed creatures.
I’m not trying to speak for God. I’m just trying to understand the story we
live in. One point seems clear, at least here on earth- struggle supplies the meaning.
This goes the same for individuals, families, tribes and nations.
The greater the struggle,
the deeper the meaning.
The more powerful the
adversary, the more satisfying is the victory.
The more daring the
adventure, the greater the payoff.
The more desperate the
escape, the more memorable the story.
Convenience masks the truth
of our situation. The truth is that we are still living in the greatest
struggle ever conceived. That we appear so wholly unprepared for such a
struggle makes it all the more difficult, and therefore all the more
meaningful.
It’s more than a struggle
for freedom. It’s a struggle to preserve free will. But this story is as old as the universe, and its resolution is written
in the law of the universe. That which attempts to divide us will instead unite
us.
The creative power of Truth,
of Light, will show its strength soon. Can we gather together in that light?
Save who and what you want.
Say whatever you wish. I have no laws to pass. What piece of creation can you
protect? What lesson can you deliver?
What mercy can you offer? Only you know. It’s simply time to honor the creation,
as we’ve always done. We honor from our free will. We are still free.
Number 89- Stepping back does not mean bringing the
system down.
In my sure to be popular “Less IT-More Fit” internet diet
plan; everyone can keep their business computers and the Internet. We can keep
the computers that maintain our air-traffic control systems, power plants,
defense apparatus etc…In fact, we can keep them all.
What I suggest is limiting or
eliminating the presence of the computer, Internet and television in your
personal life. I’m not advocating total isolation or anarchy. I’m advocating creating
an island of relative peace away from the frantic demands of the machine.
Number 90- This has already been talked about and sung
about by folks we trust.
Jesus and John and folks in the Bible weren’t the only ones
who talked about this stuff. Cultural and musical figures also leave us lasting
clues.
The works of Henry David Thoreau,
Wendell Berry, Edward Abbey, Charles Dickens. Nathaniel Hawthorne. Kurt
Vonnegut.
Frankenstein. Brave New
World. 1984.
In music, Bob Dylan, Woody Guthrie,
Paul Simon and Pink Floyd. So many more. Remember the old ballad “John Henry”-
about the railroad man who races against the steam engine? Has much really
changed?
In the movies, everything from Metropolis
to 2001: A Space Odyssey to even fun things like The Truman Show and
Jurassic Park.
Thomas Jefferson said this:
“I swear upon all the altar of God
eternal hostility to every form of tyranny over the mind of man.”
They don’t make ‘em like him
anymore.
Or like Abraham Lincoln or Martin
Luther King. But even still…
Culture and art and even our
leaders sometimes warn against technological tyranny.
Our music especially has always encouraged us
to remain free. Our music has spoken out against oppression. Just as
importantly, music celebrates that which the machine cannot contain, namely
love.
Number 91- Yelling “Fire” in a crowded theater.
Am I yelling “fire” in a crowded
theater?
What if your friends and family
were piling into a movie theater and you saw a bunch of goons in the alley
brandishing gas cans and lighters? What would you do? Would you let the people
inside know? Or would you just slink away, thinking it best not to alarm them.
Are you truly yelling “fire” in a
crowded theater if the fire hasn’t been lit yet? I hope not. Given the
circumstances, I figure the only plan of action is to step inside the theater,
loudly describe the danger in the alley, point out the exits and calmly suggest
leaving the building.
In my mind, my gut, my spirit, this
has essentially become my predicament, and it’s why I wrote this book.
Number 92- The Creation of a Community of “Reals” outside the Network.
Nothing beats just getting together with folks, having fun
and sharing life. There is less and less of that these days as the “virtual”
community takes the place of our real one. However, those that step back from
the virtual world, from the net and the web and the fake reality, will likely
find new community in the company of their fellow “Reals”.
We’ll have radical activities like picnics and concerts and
parties in the backyard, board games and nature walks. Old-fashioned activities
such as playtime and yard work may even take on sacred overtones as the new
order advances on us.
The children will understand. I
think there’s something about the logic of this argument that your child might
sympathize with instinctively. After all, I’m definitely advocating that we
spend more time with our children and less time with our phones. In the new
“Real” community, the gadgets will look out of place, like the intrusive little
brain-sucking, attention-hogging robot spies they are.
We can call it the Real Community, full of
“reals”. We won’t judge those who don’t want to be reals, but we can’t afford
to let the virtual world take much more of our privacy, dignity and freedom
away. Music will be at the heart of the new community. Natural reality will be
the setting. Our faiths will give us strength. For those of us who believe in
God, that power will be made manifest as he reveals quite clearly and
unmistakably which side he’s on.
Number 93- The measured step back.
I suggest the measured step back, concentrating on getting
the beast out of our personal and social lives a little at a time. If we can
stall it, delay it, re-shape it, peacefully make it more humane and decent- we
can extend the span of human history. It’s still ok for industry to use, for
governments to use. You can use it at work. You can go to the library and send
your e-mails. We don’t have to bring our infrastructure crashing down in order
to step back. Obviously everything I suggest is voluntary. You can do anything
you want.
However, if we continue to head
blindly into this trap, we will likely be faced with a decision whether or not
to meld with the technology. It’s quite possible that the decision we make then
may be felt across other dimensions, some of which you may want to visit
without a chip in your head, and with your gift of free will still intact. I
hate to be a stick in the mud, so here’s some good news:
God will not allow his Creation to
be forever enslaved or destroyed.
Number 94-Revelations 13…Maybe it’s time we read it.
There’s a book at Grandma’s house, and in every hotel room,
maybe even on your shelf. Towards the end of that book, there’s a famous and
very interesting 2,000 year old riddle that claims to know what things look
like when the story’s about done.
“Then I
saw another beast which rose out of the earth; …It works great signs, even
making fire come down from heaven in the sight of men….And it was allowed to
give breath to the image of the beast so that the image of the beast should
even speak, and to cause those who would not worship the image of the beast to
be slain. Also it causes all, both small and great, both rich and poor, both
free and slave, to be marked on the right hand or the forehead, so that no one
can buy or sell unless he has the mark, that is, the name of the beast or the
number of its name. This calls for wisdom: let him who has understanding reckon
the number of the beast, for it is a human number, its number is six hundred
and sixty-six.”
Revelations 13
If you were a storyteller creating a
dramatic climax to something as spectacular as the story of the human race,
maybe you’d leave a riddle, a clue, lying around in plain sight. It would make
beautiful, ambiguous, poetic sense. It’s how stories work. We like mysteries.
We like clues. Careful though…don’t get lost in there. The most important parts
of the Bible remain the meassage of Jesus and the Prophets-not just the
end-times prophecies. You can probably go nuts trying to interpret Revelations.
Please come back out and try to be here now. We need you sane and strong.
Number 95- Truth still exists.
People can still speak the truth and people can still find
the truth.
The truth
will set you free. Jesus said that.
But it’s doubtful
that God will appear through visual machinery to tell you the truth. He’s
probably not going to text you or show up on You Tube. Spiritual messages need
more than two dimensions. They can’t be microwaved or pixilated or compressed
into binary code. Why would God appear
on a television or a cell phone, when the very nature of them is so
unbelievable? It’s a wonder we believe anything that appears on those screens.
We know nothing really lives in there, don’t we?
We will likely
find truth still waiting for us just where we left it-in nature, art, music,
friends, family, work, church and love.
Number 96-Music is a unifying truthful force.
Music is one of the last things that we can universally
trust. It is both natural and supernatural by nature, consoling us with rhythm,
melody and harmony. Music is felt, not thought about. Music provides a place
where common ground can be achieved, especially when it happens live, as we
become participants in its creation.
We listen to
songs often far more faithfully than we do any preacher in the pulpit. Through
song, we are affirmed as a tribe by truth. Music is a powerful ally. We know
this instinctively. We used to sing together a lot more than we do now. Do you
remember?
Our children should be singing together at
school, at home, and in the streets. So should us adults. This is our real
heritage, the love that continues to live through song and spirit.
Number 97 -There is always Sacrifice.
Sacrifice supplies meaning. We sacrifice in order to do or
be anything. We sacrifice in order to live right or to live wrong. We must always
sacrifice. To choose to do one thing, you must sacrifice doing another.
Sacrifice is part of life all day, every day.
There are things we have sacrificed
to live in the Digital Age: privacy, natural rhythms of passing time, childhood
innocence, calmness, the natural world.
What was so terrible about the
state of affairs before the digital age? Was it that bad? I’m not talking about
the time before we had penicillin or toilets. I’m talking about thirty years
ago. What was the nightmare we were living in whereby we had to create a
worldwide machine in order to save us? Let’s see, no e-mail? No on-line
banking? No websites? No social networking on Facebook and Twitter? No viral
videos or Internet porn? Boy, those days were pretty rough.
Oh, I know, there’s a long list of
all the great things it does for you and us and mankind. I know, I know. It’s
the greatest thing since sliced bread! That’s why it’s everywhere. That’s why
it would be a sacrifice to give any of it up, wouldn’t it?
Sacrifice creates meaning.
The computer is
a sacrificial fire where we burn what is most sacred to us in order to live in
the new world, the new reality. It is a place where we cast time, knowledge,
privacy, decency, friends, music, and reality into the digital fire.
The fun part
comes when we sacrifice the machine and consciously give time back to
ourselves, our children, our earth and our God. You will find a new power then
and a path to peace, just for a little sacrifice.
Number 98-We need some famous and/or rich fun-loving allies.
The world is full of people who have found tremendous
rewards in this life. They’ve been blessed by the Universe, or God or fate or
chance or however you wish to view it.
These people are millionaires and billionaires, celebrities,
preachers and teachers, authors and entertainers. They are respected people and
have influence. It would be nice if a
couple of them spoke up to say that it’s time to set these damned screens down
and step back towards nature.
We could use a hand.
Preachers scared of offending
Internet-addicted congregations might need to pray about this one. Maybe a
movie star may want to mention it at their next award ceremony.
Hey, American Idol contestants at
the big showdown: if you’ve got a chance to speak to a live audience, please
just scream it out:
“The Internet is
the beast! Turn off the tube! First, vote for me!”
You would be
fearless and funny.
The world depends on us. If the
corporate and political forces that depend upon and hasten the installation of
this machine have to stop and acknowledge our objections, then we win. More
importantly, our children win. It will have to slow down. It’s not our job to
defeat the It. That’s God’s job. Our job is to warn about it, to sustain our
children’s freedom as long as possible, to do what God wants us to do.
Number 99-Reality, Coincidence and God are our friends in
the Story, even if they don’t always seem to do what we might wish.
It’s none of my business how or whether you worship God. I
have one piece of business and I’m doing it right now. It’s called “saying my
peace”, I guess.
Do I think you ought to read the
Bible? Sure I do. But I’m not saying you have to. I’ve been trying to figure
out how to say this stuff right for ten years. Maybe someone will listen this
time.
I’m not trying to tell you anything
bad about yourself or what you are or what you’ve done. I didn’t do this for
honor or money or glory. I certainly don’t claim to be some kind of saint. I’m
not.
I simply met the bad guy in this
dream. He’s an it, just a shadow, nothing to be scared of. We still have a good
opportunity to step away from it.
Coincidences,
synchronicities, odd riddles and ironies are our friends in this story. They are
little signposts that it’s just one story after all.
I like to think about how the sun
and moon appear to be about the same size in the sky. It doesn’t make any
scientific sense. It just is that way.
I love how the moon defies all odds
as it manages to keep only one face turned towards us.
This world is a beautiful
“coincidental” backdrop for a beautiful “coincidental” play called free will.
It isn’t the only world. There’s an unseen world beyond it. We can’t see the
other world. We can only feel it tingling around the edges of our reality. We
are safe, because we are made of spirit.
Let’s hang in there and look for signs. Let’s make it fun and sweet.
The earth
waits for her salvation too. She’s grown tired of the story where Nature is
pushed to the brink. God gave us our earth and called her good. The earth will
shake off the polluter, the oily blood-soaked plastic mess.
All things will be made new. I heard it in a love song.
Final thoughts: Recommendations in the face of madness
My recommendations: Immediately start singing and dancing
together more often. Take away visual electronic devices from your children
(allowing for a few communally shared cartoons, kids movies and live sporting
events). Cut your own screen time by 75%. You’ll lose weight, save money and
feel great!
Walk out in nature as often as
possible…even if it’s just around the block. Look at the weeds coming up though
the cement. That’s us in there too-the urge for life, the will to thrive.
Tell jokes. Laugh it off. Make it
work in a way that feels right…but please try and back away from the machine,
even just a little. I’m pretty sure I’ll be proven right about this one, folks,
and it’s likely you suspect the same.
Music is our friend. Love is our
source. God is our shield.
Inside the story, we are safe.
Outside the story, we are safe.
We can be brave one more time- to
honor the sacrifices made by our ancestors, to protect our children.
By cautiously stepping back and
initiating a global conversation, we can slow the progress of the force I call
It by decades, or centuries. We could preserve a longer history of freedom here
on earth.
Peacefully forcing this thing to
admit that its new world is mandatory could potentially save souls, spirits,
minds- however you wish to say it. There can be a simple turning away, even on
a small scale.
Ready? Deep breaths are always a
good prescription. Humble prayers. Be sure and stretch. Things are fixing to
get interesting right about now.
Let the record show I said it, my
friends, and I pray my words are for the better and not the worse.
I believe that The Light which made
us is always on us.
It’s a good story, after all.
Be with Peace. Stay strong.
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