I just read an article on Yahoo about how terrible everything is and how so many people feel helpless and discouraged. It was so stupid it almost made me laugh. To anyone who regularly reads the news the mere presence of that article is an indication of a slow news day. The article says that only seventeen percent of Americans think the country is moving in "the right direction", whatever that means. If you think about it, it's a pretty silly question to begin with. If you put a hundred Americans together in one room, ninety-seven of them wouldn't have a clue where the country has been, much less where it is going. They don't know and they don't want to know. They know all about Britney and Paris' latest escapades but they couldn't name the Vice President or Secretary of State if their lives depended on it. The other three know where we've been, but they violently disagree about which way we should go.
We live in a culture that is saturated by news every hour of every day. Since most journalistic enterprises live by the creed "If it Bleeds it Leads" most of the news we see and hear is bad. You hear all about the droughts and floods, but pleasant weather never makes the headlines. The so-called war in Iraq hasn't been a war for years. The actual war was over in a matter of weeks. It's been an occupation ever since and seems to be going pretty well in the last few months but you'd never know it by watching the news. You would think that most people (even if they opposed the invasion) would want things to go well there. God knows the Iraqis have suffered terribly under the dictatorship of Saddam and since the invasion began. You would think most people would wish them peace, prosperity and the freedom to live their lives as they see fit. Unfortunately that doesn't seem to be the case. There appear to be many in the journalistic community that equate peace, prosperity and freedom for the Iraqis as a victory for George Bush and that is simply unthinkable. So they keep stirring the pot.
High gas prices are probably the leading cause of doom and gloom lately. Americans are woefully ignorant of how the oil and gas business works and, as usual, we are poorly served by our news media. If a situation really bothers me or makes me mad I try to learn as much about it as possible so I can support the politicians and policies that are most likely to change it. I'm afraid that most Americans would rather just find someone to blame. The oil companies might not be at fault (Learn all you can and then judge for yourselves) but they make easy scapegoats - sort of like the Jews during the Black Plague. I don't pretend to be an expert on economics but common sense tells me that the law of supply and demand is probably more to blame than anything else. If we want the price to come down we either need to make more or use less (or a combination of the two). Perhaps we should allow the oil companies to drill offshore and in ANWR. Maybe we should all ride bicycles or drive electric cars. One thing I know for sure and that is if politicians get involved it will only get worse.
In the meantime, the sun still rises every morning. I watched several professional sporting events on television this weekend - soccer, baseball and arena football - and all the stadiums were full in spite of the terrible economy. I checked the latest unemployment stats - hovering around 5% - and they are better than just about anywhere else in the world. Last week I read that Americans' life expectancy had gone up yet again, in spite of all those dreaded chemicals and genetically modified foods and awful diseases floating around out there. My office looks out on a four-lane highway and as far as I can tell there is as much traffic as ever, in spite of the high gas prices. I went to the grocery store in San Angelo yesterday and it was full of customers with carts overflowing, in spite of high food prices. I know a lot of people, but I don't know anyone who lost their home to forclosure, in spite of the sub-prime lending fiasco. Those folks in Iowa who've suffered through the flooding will come back stronger than ever, because that is their nature. You don't hear them whining about FEMA or Bush or crying for help. They are used to adversity, hard work and taking care of their own.
The bottom line is this: There are over six billion people on this planet insuring a constant abundance of bad news. There will always be disasters both man-made and otherwise. Bad news is what sells. Sometimes it's best to trash the newspaper, turn off the tv, shut down the computer and just go fishing.
Monday, June 23, 2008
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5 comments:
is there supposed to be text here? or did you just want to say things aren't that bad?
Unfortunately our society no longer breeds optimists; instead humans have become more ignorant, self-centered & apathetic.
love this, daddy.
my favorite thing you've written yet.
As Jon Stewart says: there are either busy or crazy. The busy are too busy working on their life. The crazy are the ones trying to run things.
Since I'm one of the busy, I'll take you up on the idea of shutting down and going fishing.
I agree with some of this, sure. But not all. The war in Iraq being over? Some would argue that that is the case only in Bush's deluded "mission accomplished" speech and that it's no less a war in real terms than it ever was. Certainly more people on both sides have been killed since the war "ended".
Drilling in ANWR would seem to me a very bad idea. And you guys have it easy with your gas prices. We're paying £1.19 per litre, which is around $9.50 a gallon.
And people are still eating cos they have to, right? I mean, what's the alternative? Sit and wait for a slow death?
Yes, the press isolates extreme news. That's to keep us scared and keep us voting for those promising they can defeat "terror" when really they have no clue.
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