The Critique of Politics #10: Party of One—Self-activism and Saving Humanity
The Critique of Politics #10: Party of
One—Self-activism and Saving Humanity
By Tim Krenz
For the Hometown Gazette
December 6, 2019
We live in a complex age. And like all
ages, the complexity only increases, especially in the politics. As
in most things in life, politics inevitably multiplies the questions
we should ask. Furthermore, people need to know the type of questions
to ask, first, before trying to answer anything. I have a question,
to start this essay: “How can the United States of America stay
free and united, with the most liberty for everyone, protecting all
forms of their property, while eliminating the threat or use of force
or other coercion that would cause violence and destruction?”
Complex times, and direct questions,
require simple answers. In this tenth critique of politics, we will
examine the different consequences looming of not satisfactorily
answering the question above, and then exploring how rather average
individuals hold the key to solving most political problems. In
looking at plain people and their ability, we shun any reliance on a
leader, a political organization, or a party or a faction. The United
States, not too surprisingly, stands at a cross roads, an
intersection between its fate as a major power in the world,
vis-a-vis China and its clients, and in its form as a republic under
a constitution and laws, and in the place of democracy in the future
world. We require everyone, every citizen, to bring their
convictions, their ethics, their decisions, and their actions in the
civic realm. And every citizen must play its role not in a
conventional and passive participation of voting on occasion, as it
suits them. For the change needed must involve everyone, as
individuals.
Several catastrophes or combinations of
them, could cause fatal ruptures in the political future of the US: A
breakdown of the shared structure of powers, between state and
central federal authorities; a massive credit and finance collapse,
including sovereign debt repudiation; famine, resulting from any
number of environmental and economic catalysts; civil disturbance or
insurrection following an election, or another event of unintended
consequences; a war somewhere involving the US, which might include
nuclear weapons; an epidemic of natural or weaponized origin. Even if
seemingly improbable, these events all hold the realm of the
possible. All the above events, however, can cause immense harm,
especially without a unified populace working together to eliminate
the danger, mitigate their effects, or recover in their aftermath. In
a complex age, unexpected events also happen. A nation plans for
these and other possibilities. But who, actually, suffer them? The
very same population that allows the worse of their nightmares to
come true, if only from the ignorance and apathy of how their
division and hatreds make all things worse—past, present, and
future.
The greatest weakness in the current
politics comes from the two things people in our connected age seem
to hate to do: Staying quiet long enough to listen to others, and
second, having to calmly discuss their differences with people
opposed to them. In more than one way, listening skills and
person-to-person conversations of depth and breadth, both hold the
key to answering the question of this essay: “How can the United
States of America stay free and united, with the most liberty for
everyone, protecting all forms of their property, while eliminating
the threat or use of force or other coercion that would cause
violence and destruction?”
Most often, people want the government
or political factions to solve their problems, in their rather
graceless forms as a bad acting troupe dance at a theater of absurd
egos. We should have never relied on them. We should never now or
again. For in the case of listening and dialog, as President Reagan
would have said, “Government IS the problem.” The solution relies
on principle, and effort, by the individuals and not on a government
creating a task force or spending money it does not have. The core
foundation of the listening and dialog starts at the bottom rung of
civics: Where you sit marks where you will have to make your stand.
How? As implied above, we live in a
complex age and one that seems to talk loud, chatter aimlessly, and
voice its indignation at others (especially those in opposition).
And, after a length of a short time, that just becomes so much more
like noise—a dull, deafening hum, directed at people, and done so
forcefully to make them submit. If we diagnose this political disease
correctly, without immunity by anyone, we might call it more of a
listening problem, a debility to want to hear ourselves talk instead
of learning what other might know or wonder. But this civic deafness
comes NOT in not hearing other people's opinions. For after all, the
opinions make that dull static. What exactly do we not hear? Of what
do we not hear enough? Simply, in this complex age, like any complex
age, we do not hear the questions that need asking. Without those, we
never arrive at the bigger issue of understanding the real questions
we need to ask.
In suffering this breakdown in
conversation and the art of listening, the division of opinions only
increase into more groups that political elites, business giants,
social icons, and cultural manipulators can more easily manage to
their own, exclusive and profitable advantage. Never mind answers,
yet. The questions matter more at this stage. Mine in refrain: “How
can the United States of America stay free and united, with the most
liberty for everyone, protecting all forms of their property, while
eliminating the threat or use of force or other coercion that would
cause violence and destruction?”
When Herodotus, the ancient Greek,
invented the discipline of history, he labeled it “historia,”
partly meaning “inquiry.”And later in ancient Greece, Socrates
(brought to us via the writings of Plato) rarely offered opinions in
his dialog with numerous pretenders and sophists. Instead, he asked
questions of them to narrow down their meanings and beliefs. Shame on
those fools who would not stand up to scrutiny. Inter-personal
conversation, not any super-media, might make questioning and
listening, listening and questioning, the better media for
understanding things, especially in the age of complexity. Instead of
groups of political-opinionated people preaching to and
congratulating each other, perhaps they should approach opposing
groups and ask some rather simple questions and then actually listen.
They can demand the same courtesy. The questions might come out like
this:
“What do you need to happen which we
can give you, provided you give us what we need? What do you want
from us that we can deliver for a trade from you? If we do this for
you, what can you do for us? Can we agree to live together, unified
and in peace, or go our own ways, in peace?”
This type of asking questions and
listening to the answers, not by politicians but by real people who
have to abide by the process, or suffer the consequences, might find
common ground. And honestly, it might not. At least then, the little
differences between real people (NOT political, business, social, and
cultural elites) get narrowed and settled where they can. The dialog,
the conversation itself, might reveal more similarity of our plight
than otherwise thought. At least, it begins the one thing all
individuals need: To identify that elites have little in common with
them, at the core of convictions and actions. Common people have
common problems. Elites identify with each other. And, in the end, if
the individual to individual or group to group dialog solves nothing
else, it solves the question of how to disagree amicably and they
might find a way of living peacefully despite the division. No one
knows until they have the courage of their own knowledge by asking
the very, very hard question of consciousness: What do I believe and
why?
This process of each person simply
becoming a party of themselves in the mix of the complex age might
seem unlikely now. It can get done. And it must, and inquiry and its
history can then continue.
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