Madame:
The “drifting” of power and money to the few does indeed take
place all the time, because the majority of people are concerned with living
their lives, not seeking to amass great power and wealth. And power and wealth tend to slowly beget
more power and wealth.
Largely, only the driven, ambitious, focused, etc. care to amass
great power. Unfortunately, those are
also more likely to have among them great numbers of sociopaths, megalomaniacs,
the dangerously insecure, the unenlightened, the monstrously selfish, etc., not
to mention the hypocritical and shallow.
Even more unfortunately, many of them will not even be satisfied with
fomenting the “drift,” but will move rapidly to strongly and unscrupulously to
either 1) serve bad power, or 2) amass bad power for themselves. The cycle will continue at least until we both
infuse in ourselves the sentiment that Jefferson repeated—the price of liberty
is eternal vigilance—AND find a way to improve the human mental, emotional, and
spiritual condition to vastly reduce the numbers of sociopaths, megalomaniacs,
etc.
Which also means the better rule sets we craft and enforce, the better
the playing field can contain the attempted excesses.
Still, there is no doubt that perspective needs to be
maintained. For instance:
“News is about things that happen, not things that don’t
happen. You never see a TV crew
reporting that a country isn’t at war, or that a city hasn’t had a mass
shooting that day. Or that millions of
80 year olds are alive and well.
“Violent crime has fallen by half since 1992, and fiftyfold
since the Middle Ages. Over the past 60
years the number of wars and number of people killed in wars have plummeted
(Prof note: The carnage of WW2 made that comparison too easy). Worldwide, fewer babies die, more children go
to school, more people live in democracies, more can afford simple luxuries,
fewer get sick, and more live to old age.
“Problems that look hopeless may not be; human ingenuity can
chip away at them. “We will never have a perfect world, but it’s not romantic
or naïve to work toward a better one.” Steven Pinker, Harvard psychologist
“When things are bad,
do good.” Little known motto of a major
charitable organization.
“I could do other things.
Make more money. But I choose to
be here, teaching here, because I believe in YOU. That some of you are going to change the
community, our society, even the world for the better. May your days be filled
with passion, may you have a wonderful, exuberant career.” Robert Reich, former Secretary of Labor, explaining
to students why he teaches at Berkeley.
“The free MUST remember the oppressed.” Amnesty International
motto.
And if we are paying attention, we will always find life more
wonderfully complex than we realized.
For instance (‘free market” fanatics may want to hold their heads to
contain any explosive force), competition in Europe has often been CREATED by
governments. Certainly this is so for the
phone service there, with the added twist that the governments forced the phone
companies to be interoperable (one of the reasons phone service is generally
much better in Europe than in the US).
I am, as you know, no advocate for pollyanish
thinking, outlooks, or behavior. But I
also know that we can do much to make ourselves better. One of the ways is to embrace the written word. As Levar Burton asks, do your children, friends,
family, and colleagues see you reading?
How many books do you have around home?
Do you have an evening a week where you don’t watch TV or do other
things, but just read?
Our reply to those who focus ONLY on
negativity, who do so without contribution or desire for action to change, can
thus be two simple questions: “What good book are you reading? What are you filling yourself up with
intellectually and emotionally?”
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