Nov. 1, 2010
COMMENTARY: Restoring Sanity with a New Story
By Winslow Myers
In this silly season of the mid-term elections, where left and right
are each proclaiming imminent apocalypse if the other side prevails,
it can be a relief to turn to measured voices and larger views. No
voice is more measured nor view larger than that of the late Thomas
Berry, a historian of cultures who called himself a “geologian,”
because the ruler by which he measured current events was no less than
the 13.7 billion year story of the universe itself.
In the last few centuries, technology has allied with market systems
to reduce our world to consumable resources. Berry asserted that in
this reduction we moderns have lost our story, our deep cultural sense
of what gives life meaning. Yet that same technology has made
available to us the new story we seek, in the magnificent unfolding
epic of the cosmos, revealed by such devices as the Hubble telescope.
Berry calls us back to wonder and awe as he invites us to see that the
universe has brought forth on our unique planet a community of
interrelated beings. Our own vibrancy, our full mental and physical
health, is dependent upon the health of the trees, plants, fish, coral
reefs, birds, the systems of air, water and soil, into which our own
life is intimately merged. Economics and politics have to begin here.
Our market and social systems cannot be healthier than the overall
health of earth systems.
Even ethics begin here. Berry posited that the universe on every level
is subject to three fundamental impulses, which he called
differentiation, subjectivity, and communion. What fosters these
impulses is good. What hinders them is evil. In the variety of life on
earth we see a demonstration of differentiation, the process over time
of life forms becoming increasingly diverse over millions of years of
branching out into complexity. This multiplicity of fish and plants
and animals strengthens the total ecosystem because life has so many
ways to respond to environmental stresses. With the advent of
mammalian forms of life that care for their young, we can also see a
demonstration of deepening subjectivity. Our own brains, capable of
creating intricate musical patterns, feeling deep empathy for the less
fortunate, or gazing in wonder at the distant glimmer of stars, are
proof from within of the depths of subjectivity of which the universe
is capable.
Civility is the virtue-du-jour that is lacking in this election
season, but the deeper wisdom that can inform civility lies within the
story of an unfolding process that formed the wheeling galaxies, the
solar system, and the earth that sustains us, whether we call
ourselves conservative or progressive, Christian or Muslim, Arab or
Jew. The deep sense that we belong here, within one great story that
transcends all our separate religious books and stories, changes
something in us. It is an experience of the whole, one that cautions
against breaking up the human family into “us” and “them.”
One place where the tail of our consumer culture begins to wag the dog
of sane policy is in the concept of the multi-national corporation.
The extraordinary conclusion of our Supreme Court in the Citizens
United case that corporations have the same right of free speech as
individuals has accelerated to warp speed the infusion of money into
the waging of political warfare.
In the case of the U.S. campaigns in Iraq and Afghanistan, the
corporate tail of security services and other gigantic logistical
support firms supplying food or fuel for military incursions wags the
dog of security goals. Stockholders want good returns on their
investments. Career officers want battlefield success that will lead
to promotions. And so we have the grotesque statistic that it takes a
million dollars a year for each American soldier to remain in
Afghanistan. With Al-Quaeda globally mobile, our ultimate purpose for
staying there has become increasingly murky. The more effective our
soldiers become at killing, the more ill will they generate.
Thinking long-term like Thomas Berry, four establishment figures
intimately acquainted with the world’s nuclear arsenals—Henry
Kissinger, Sam Nunn, George Schultz and William Perry—came out in 2007
in favor of nuclear abolition, because they realized that the use of
such weapons is the ultimate catastrophe toward which existing
international structures and policies are tending. If we can pull back
from nuclear weapons, could we not learn how to do without war
altogether as a means of resolving the inevitable conflicts among us?
As we watch the dialogue about nuclear abolition in the next few
years, we should be able to see how the corporate tail that needs to
make these weapons for their bottom line will try to wag the dog of
objective policy. The same is true for many powerful market forces at
this crossroads moment in the great human experiment: will oil and
coal interests call the tune in a sad dance of death, or will we make
the great transition into sustainable and clean sources of energy and
stabilize the global climate?
The temptation on the left is to make a new set of enemies out of the
menace of greedy corporatism. That will only play into the hands of
those who rationalize maintaining control by violence, enabled by vast
sums of money. The real answer is to change our thinking, one heart at
a time, in order to come to a new place of agreement that we are one
interdependent, interrelated species among many other such species, on
a small blue pearl of a planet.
This primary insight will generate the political and economic
structures that will sustain us. Berry argued that we face a stark
choice, where one road, the road we are on now, leads toward a
“Technozoic” age of continued consumerism and futile attempts at
control of both natural systems and people. Berry’s preferred road
leads into what he called the “Ecozoic,” a new era of cooperation with
each other and with biological systems. As John Stewart said at his
rally to Restore Sanity, "This is not to suggest that times are not
difficult and that we have nothing to fear. They are and we do. But we
live now in hard times, not end times. We can have animus and not be
enemies."
In fact we can refocus our animus on solving the challenges we all
share, leaving behind the need to pose enemies altogether. After the
massive economic, ecological and emotional burdens of the Cold War,
the “clash of civilizations,” and a descent into domestic political
polarization, that would truly be a restoration of sanity.
* * *
Winslow Myers, author of “Living Beyond War: A Citizen’s Guide,” lives
in Boston and serves on the Board of Directors of Beyond War. This commentary
was distributed by PeaceVoice, a program of the Oregon Peace Institute, Portland, OR.
http://www.peacevoice.info/