Libre
been around a little
- Local time
- Today, 11:59
- Joined
- May 3, 2007
- Messages
- 680
CRISES
Marc Friedlander
At any given time, in our incredibly complex and close knit world, there are 1 or more major disasters unfolding, a number of potential ones brewing, and a few winding down (or at least we get tired of hearing about them and/or the press gets tired of reporting them). Currently we have the Ebola epidemic and the ISIS war. The crisis in the Ukraine hasn't ended, but it's no longer front page news.
Then there was the Secret Service SNAFU, the EU about to fall apart, and let's not forget about the BP oil spill (as much as they encourage us to). 9/11/2001 remains a searing memory that none of us will ever forget. Going back - I can seldom remember a time - since the Cuban Missile Crisis - that impending doom hasn't seemed almost inevitable.
When a crisis breaks into the news, there is always finger pointing and blame ducking - heroes and villains emerge and heads roll. I've seen it countless times since I became politically aware.
What I want to bring out, is that it's all wrong - the blame game, that is. Of course mistakes are made - but this can be seen only in retrospect. At any given moment, there are an infinity of POSSIBLE catastrophes - both man made and natural - and NOBODY knows what is about to happen in the next moment.
As a society, we can only deal with so many problems at one time. First, the ACTUAL issues have to be addressed, then we can try to ward off a few potential ones, and if we have anything left over, maybe we can entertain ourselves with something like sports or art to help us forget the peril we're always confronting.
No matter how carful we are and how we try to prepare, it's the unimagined disasters that catch us by surprise that really do the damage. Thomas Duncan was a Black man without medical insurance and the fu*kers SENT HIM HOME!!!! Well, who knew what would happen? Now, any uninsured person who shows up at an emergency room and even just had a dream about West Africa, must be attended to with great care. Now - now that it's on the radar. After all, imagine the criticism a hospital would face if they did otherwise. And we must all avoid criticism. A crisis can't be seen as OUR fault. As long as somebody else has to take the blame we're okay.
That's what "we" do. When something terrible happens, we blame whomever is handy (hardly ever ourselves). Usually the pilloried ones resign in ignomy. The more we can blame THEM the more we seem rightous and concerned. Then we take resources away from something else that nobody is really looking at for the moment, and apply those resources to the current disaster. Then some other trouble start to fester and may become hazardous. When (not if) something new happens, and people get hit by something unforeseen, someone gets the blame, and resources are diverted from yet other things to this new thing. Now those other things - without the scrutiny and resources that they once "enjoyed" become far more dangerous, turn into a new crisis, and people suffer.
Blame Obama. Blame the Secret Service director. Or the Supreme Court, the police, the Congress, the Good Humor Man, or the man in the moon. We say that THEY should have known this could happen and THEY should have prevented it. We say that THEY must do SOMETHING about it.
Grow up, people.
Marc Friedlander
At any given time, in our incredibly complex and close knit world, there are 1 or more major disasters unfolding, a number of potential ones brewing, and a few winding down (or at least we get tired of hearing about them and/or the press gets tired of reporting them). Currently we have the Ebola epidemic and the ISIS war. The crisis in the Ukraine hasn't ended, but it's no longer front page news.
Then there was the Secret Service SNAFU, the EU about to fall apart, and let's not forget about the BP oil spill (as much as they encourage us to). 9/11/2001 remains a searing memory that none of us will ever forget. Going back - I can seldom remember a time - since the Cuban Missile Crisis - that impending doom hasn't seemed almost inevitable.
When a crisis breaks into the news, there is always finger pointing and blame ducking - heroes and villains emerge and heads roll. I've seen it countless times since I became politically aware.
What I want to bring out, is that it's all wrong - the blame game, that is. Of course mistakes are made - but this can be seen only in retrospect. At any given moment, there are an infinity of POSSIBLE catastrophes - both man made and natural - and NOBODY knows what is about to happen in the next moment.
As a society, we can only deal with so many problems at one time. First, the ACTUAL issues have to be addressed, then we can try to ward off a few potential ones, and if we have anything left over, maybe we can entertain ourselves with something like sports or art to help us forget the peril we're always confronting.
No matter how carful we are and how we try to prepare, it's the unimagined disasters that catch us by surprise that really do the damage. Thomas Duncan was a Black man without medical insurance and the fu*kers SENT HIM HOME!!!! Well, who knew what would happen? Now, any uninsured person who shows up at an emergency room and even just had a dream about West Africa, must be attended to with great care. Now - now that it's on the radar. After all, imagine the criticism a hospital would face if they did otherwise. And we must all avoid criticism. A crisis can't be seen as OUR fault. As long as somebody else has to take the blame we're okay.
That's what "we" do. When something terrible happens, we blame whomever is handy (hardly ever ourselves). Usually the pilloried ones resign in ignomy. The more we can blame THEM the more we seem rightous and concerned. Then we take resources away from something else that nobody is really looking at for the moment, and apply those resources to the current disaster. Then some other trouble start to fester and may become hazardous. When (not if) something new happens, and people get hit by something unforeseen, someone gets the blame, and resources are diverted from yet other things to this new thing. Now those other things - without the scrutiny and resources that they once "enjoyed" become far more dangerous, turn into a new crisis, and people suffer.
Blame Obama. Blame the Secret Service director. Or the Supreme Court, the police, the Congress, the Good Humor Man, or the man in the moon. We say that THEY should have known this could happen and THEY should have prevented it. We say that THEY must do SOMETHING about it.
Grow up, people.