by starroute » Tue Jul 11, 2006 11:53 pm
When I first read 1984 as an adolescent (or read parts of it, anyway -- I've never been able to bear reading it straight through), I had the feeling there was something implausible about that foot-stepping-on-a-human-face-forever scenario, but I couldn't figure out why. After a couple of years, the little light bulb clicked on, and I realized it was a matter of boredom. The world of 1984 is not merely repressive, it's also incredibly, intolerably, unendurably boring. As boring as a long, dull Victorian Sunday afternoon, sitting in the front parlor with two maiden aunts. And boredom is one thing that Homo sapiens (unlike Neanderthal, apparently) has very little patience with.<br><br>It took several more years (and getting away from the spell of the 60's) for me to realize that the opposite of boredom isn't kicks, or trendy fashions, or even visiting exotic places. Instead, it's telling -- and then living out -- new and better stories. Stories of personal accomplishment or enlightenment. Stories of social liberation. Stories of discovery and transformation.<br><br>If liberalism's been in the dumps for the last generation it's because (at least once the left got all that triumph of the proletariat stuff kicked out of it) it hasn't had any better story to tell than "in the future, we will all be comfortable." And that's a dead bore. Conservatism, for all its retrogressive leanings, at least used to have more of a spirit of adventure. <br><br>But as John Dean is now reminding us, over the last decade or so, conservativism has gotten reduced to authoritarianism -- which is to say, boredom squared. A "you do what we tell you" society, with no room for initiative or exploration or achievement. And who needs that?<br><br>So let us tell the best stories we know -- stories about a world of creative possibility and individual fulfillment. Let us then live out those stories to the greatest extent the present world allows. If we can do that, we will at the very least have far more fun ourselves -- and simply by having fun, we will set an example for others to emulate us.<br><br>Ultimately that's all it's about. Telling good stories and having fun acting them out will always trump naked power-trips.<br> <p></p><i>Edited by: <A HREF=http://p216.ezboard.com/brigorousintuition.showUserPublicProfile?gid=starroute>starroute</A> at: 7/11/06 9:56 pm<br></i>