Spiritually Rudderless
By Robert C. Koehler
November 05, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Another deep cry, followed by a shrug. The world is at
war, at war, at war. But it only hurts them, the
helpless ones, the anonymous poor, who absorb the bombs
and bullets, who bury their children, who flee their
broken countries.Sixty million
people have been displaced by the current wars, the
highest number of uprooted since World War II. But who
cares?
“In the face of blatant inhumanity,
the world has responded with disturbing paralysis.”
The words are those of Ban Ki-Moon,
executive-secretary of the United Nations, who, along
with Paul Maurer, president of the International
Committee of the Red Cross, issued a
joint cry of anguish last week: Things are worse
than they’ve been in a long time. Not only are wars
tearing apart Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Nigeria,
South Sudan and other countries, but the conflicts seem
to be increasingly lacking in moral constraint.
“Every day,” said Maurer, “we hear of
civilians being killed and wounded in violation of the
basic rules of international humanitarian law, and with
total impunity. Instability is spreading. Suffering is
growing. No country can remain untouched.”
These words may be factually accurate,
but you can’t really call them a “warning.” A warning
can only be addressed to someone with the power to
change course, make different decisions, sidestep the
looming disaster.
“. . . the world has responded with
disturbing paralysis.” What else has “the world” ever
done?
The momentum of human annihilation
cannot be interrupted.
Oh, I hope such a statement is
inaccurate, but in this moment, all I can see is that
we’re trapped in the geopolitics and economics . . . of
Armageddon. The world’s national leaders are inadequate
stewards of humanity and the needs of Planet Earth.
Politically, the world is sliced into nation-states,
which fiercely prowl their perimeters, guarding their
own interests from both external and internal threats.
This behavior is called war, and war, in point of fact,
has no rules, humanitarian or otherwise. Peace has
rules. War has only a goal: victory.
Stir in economic interests — the force
called money — and the pot really starts to boil. The
interests of money transcend national borders. Its
agents and stewards, the global corporatocracy, serve
only the interests of economic growth, which has even
fewer moral constraints than nationalism. Unchecked
economic growth is tantamount to the consumption of the
planet, not just physically (using up its resources,
ravaging the environment), but culturally and
spiritually as well.
Once upon a time, the planet was
festooned with local cultures: sociocultural systems on
a human scale. People had a participatory relationship
with the world in which they lived. Under such
conditions, perhaps the words of Ban Ki-Moon and Paul
Maurer could constitute a real warning. People could
take heed and rein in manifestations of blatant
inhumanity. They could assume a sense of behavioral
responsibility that reached seven generations into the
future.
This is not the world we live in now.
Writing about the crushing impact of
global economic development/exploitation on local
cultural integrity,
Helena Norberg-Hodge, founder and director of the
organization Local Futures and co-director of the
documentary, The Economics of Happiness, talked about
the changes she has witnessed in a region of northern
India called Ladakh.
“In part, the Ladakhis’ confidence and
sense of having enough emanated from a deep sense of
community: people knew they could depend on one
another,” she
wrote at Common Dreams. “But in 1975 . . .
the Indian government decided to open up the region to
the process of development, and life began to change
rapidly. Within a few years the Ladakhis were exposed to
television, Western movies, advertising, and a seasonal
flood of foreign tourists. Subsidized food and consumer
goods — from Michael Jackson CDs and plastic toys to
Rambo videos and pornography — poured in on the new
roads that development brought.”
The local economy and the local
culture got swallowed, over the course of several
decades, by what she called “the consumer monoculture.”
The resulting changes were more than just superficial.
People, you might say, started to become spiritually
rudderless.
She described what this can look like:
“For more than 600 years,” she wrote, “Buddhists and
Muslims lived side by side in Ladakh with no recorded
instance of group conflict. They helped one another at
harvest time, attended one another’s religious
festivals, and sometimes intermarried. But over a period
of about 15 years, tensions between Buddhists and
Muslims escalated rapidly, and by 1989 they were bombing
each other’s homes.”
And so we begin to get at the deeper
forces at work in today’s world. Consumer monoculture
centralizes the power to act. We can consume the news —
read about war, read about climate change — but where
then in our distress, if indeed this is what is aroused,
do we turn? What do we do? Perhaps we blame “them.” At
both the macro and the micro levels, humanity turns to
violence. This is the all-purpose solution of the
powerless.
And the world convulses at what may be
the dawn of World War III. Sixty million people have
been displaced by the current wars. We reach into our
souls, looking for the force that is larger than war.