By Alan Caruba
America and the rest of the world are
in a confluence of events that are causing widespread anxiety and fear. The
Connecticut massacre is just one, isolated example.
It is being reported that the
killer’s mother was as mentally unstable as her son. A report in the British
daily, the Mail, said “Friends and family portrayed Adam Lanza’s mother Nancy as
a paranoid ‘survivalist’ who believed the world was on the verge of violent,
economic collapse” who had been “stockpiling food, water, and guns in the large
home she shared with her 20-year-old son in
Connecticut.”
Why Adam Lanza decided to kill
children and staff will never be known, but it fits into a larger picture of the
widespread fears surging over the planet like winds of doom. The tens of
thousands of Syrian civil war victims are too great a number to grasp, but
twenty children and six teachers and staff is.
We view the world through the prism
of our own life experiences and the young among us have considerably less on
which to draw in terms of understanding a world that appears to be—and is—a
dangerous place where our freedoms and our lives are seen to be in imminent
danger.
On Friday, December 21, millions
around the world will await the fulfillment of a Mayan prediction that it will
come to an end. When one considers that the end came long ago for the Mayan
civilization, there is some irony in this, but it is testimony to the many
end-of-the-world predictions that are embedded in religions that billions adhere
to and believe.
There are Bible stories such as
Noah’s flood preparations to avoid an angry God’s decision to start over again
or with the story of Armageddon. When the first atomic bomb tests were
successful, Robert Oppenheimer, one of its creators reportedly said, “I have
become Shiva”, the god of death and the destroyer of worlds from the Hindu holy
book, the Bhagavad Gita: “If the radiance of a thousand suns were to burst at
once into the sky, that would be like the splendor of the mighty
one.”
It was an apt quote because mankind
has arrived at a point where nuclear weapons can kill millions. In the back of
our minds, we all worry that Iran, a nation ruled by fanatical Muslims who
believe that widespread death and destruction is necessary to bring about the
return of a mythical Twelfth Imam and the rule of Islam over the world. These
leaders regard the U.S. as “the great Satan” and Israel as the “Little Satan.”
Irrationality has never been a deterrent to war and, in the last century, we
witnessed two world wars and many lesser ones that arose from the human instinct
to conquer and kill.
It is noteworthy that the Iranians
and other Muslims adamantly deny the Nazi Holocaust that systematically killed
six million Jews in Europe during World War II. The resurrection of the state of
Israel is one of the true miracles of modern times after the passage of two
thousand years.
The prospects for avoiding a Middle
East cataclysm are growing slimmer as the Obama administration has hued closely
to the belief—disproven throughout history—that one can resolve such outcomes
by talking to one’s enemies, even
those who have openly stated their wish to kill us. In a world filled with
nations in the grip of despots—often elected to office—this is wishful thinking
to the point of national suicide.
Then, too, since the 1980s the world
has been assailed by the greatest hoax, global warming claiming the destruction
of all life on Earth due to the rise of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere.
It has been rising although it remains a trace gas, barely 0.038%, but the Earth
has been in a natural cooling cycle for the past sixteen years and shows no
evidence of warming, nor ever could be affected by CO2 which plays no role in
climate change. What does? The Sun.
Religious zealots have been joined in
recent times by a new priesthood, the many scientists who have been predicting
the end of mankind. In 1968, Paul Ehrlich, a biologist who worked closely with
the current science advisor to the President, John Holdren, predicted that “The
battle to feed all over humanity is over.” He predicted that millions would die.
They didn’t.
The Bulletin of the Atomic scientists
moved its Doomsday Clock one minute closer to midnight at the start of 2012,
saying “The global community may be near a point of no return in efforts to
prevent catastrophe from changes in Earth’s atmosphere.” Rubbish! The Earth’s
climate has gone through many epochs that were filled with catastrophes,
including Ice Ages and magnetic reversals that brought with them mass
extinctions of species.
The classic Bible story in Revelation
depicts the Four Horseman, conquest, war, disease and death. Despite these, the world population
quadrupled in the 20th
century, given improved agricultural advances in seeds, fertilizers, pesticides,
transport, and irrigation. Even so, we’re told that family size continues to
shrink on every continent, despite predictions that it will top out at around
nine billion by 2050. But they are only predictions, much like the Mayan
calendar prediction.
Lastly, for Americans, there is the
prospect of debt that could render the dollar useless and yet we continue to see
Congress relentlessly borrowing and spending more money than the economy can
possibly sustain; $4.8 billion is borrowed every day. All good and bad things
come to an end if prudence and good governance is not exercised.
All this has long been known. In 55 BC, the Roman
philosopher, Marcus Tillius Cicero, said "The budget should be balanced, the
Treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of
officialdom should be tempered and controlled, and the assistance to foreign
lands should be curtailed lest Rome become bankrupt. People must again learn to
work, instead of living on public assistance."
Finally, America is as deeply divided among its
citizens as it has ever been since 1861 when it engaged in a Civil War that
killed a tenth of its population. A nation this divided has little hope to
sustain itself, especially when one half of the population is heavily taxed to
sustain the other half that ops to live on government
handouts.
A random, senseless act of violence such as occurred
in Newtown, Connecticut, only exacerbates our fears. There are, however, far
greater things to fear—real, not imaginary—and individually we feel helpless to
avert them.
© Alan Caruba, 2012
1 comment:
theo:
alan's article is extremely written, timely, and has observations that should temper the hysteria.
especially as to climate, and as to politics.
it won't.
he is correct when he says the people of the united states are spoiling for a family fight, just as intensely as they wished it before the coming of the civil war.
i put the public temperament at somewhere between "uncle tom's cabin" and john brown's attack at harper's ferry, needing just one more or less public/political upheaval before the whole thing goes up like a box of tinder.
it is a wonderful post. i hope people will read it, will reflect upon it, and will offer their thoughts.
john jay
milton freewater, oregon usa
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