Nature’s Way – I

lazy

Nature is lazy. It’s always looking for the shortest route with the least resistance, direct and to the point, no wasting time or energy.

Nature has a lesson for us. She’s demonstrating the way : the no hoops way. I find myself jumping through hoops too often. Swimming upstream, spitting in the wind, tilting at windmills, going against the grain, doing it the hard way, spinning my wheels, overkill, barking up the wrong tree, hitting my head against the wall, going up blind alleys, all over the map, willy-nilly, making mountains out of molehills, trying to move mountains, running in the sand, running headlong into uphill battles, going for the long shot, pyrrhic victories. . . English has a boat load of idioms to express the dire straights we put ourselves into when we refuse to go with the flow. Nature naturally takes the easy way out, and for good reason. It’s efficient. It gets the job done. And when it’s done without artifice or contrivance, the grace and ease of nature produces results of natural, genuine beauty.

There are a myriad of analogies between nature and art, nature and design, nature and happiness, satisfaction, and the most useful, functional, highest performing human creations.

The only thing nature does to excess is reproduce. If there’s a food supply, nature eats it up and reproduces until the supply is exhausted. Nature can’t control itself in this department. Now, point the light on humanity. Humans, despite what we think of ourselves, are doing likewise. In my lifetime, the world population has more than doubled. It took the first two-hundred-thousand years of human existence for the population to hit the one billion mark; in the last two hundred years it has nearly octupled. At over seven billion and counting, we’re taking over more land, sucking up more water, and leaving behind more waste. Add in our technological advances, which amplifies our production-consumption-disposal cycle, and we’re heading full tilt towards a breathtaking precipice.

Nature’s ways are excellent in most ways, but in one way it fails miserably : self-monitoring control. You may argue with that statement by citing nature is good at self-correcting and rebalancing. However, it always comes after the fact—after overbreeding, after running out of resources, after the crash of the ecosystem—then it regroups. Self monitoring control is an active, conscious behavior, not a passive, automatic response. Fortunately, nature gave us humans something that can find a way out of the predicament. It’s a brain able to foresee, anticipate, extrapolate, plan, cooperate, coordinate.

The challenge is, how can seven billion individual brains unify to create an organized, self-monitoring system that corrects, regulates, and balances before heading blindly into collapse? It appears nature hasn’t devised a way for global self control.

Nature’s second lesson is a bit more subtle : use your brain in nature’s way. Not to overtake or control nature, but rather, to take the path of least resistance. Nature is lazy and selfish; humans are lazy and selfish. But the human brain has an extra capacity to foresee beyond its immediate wants. With billions of others in the world, our selfish ways need to be more fully exploited. Because we are not alone in this world, because we share it with seven billion other humans, and billions and billions of other organisms, all of whom we rely on in some manner for our own needs, we need to be more selfish. Yes, I said more selfish. To make it clear, I’m not saying childish, I-me-mine selfishness. To make it clearer, I’m saying intelligent selfishness. By realizing we aren’t alone, that we can’t survive on our own, intelligent selfishness takes into account the other. It isn’t altruism that gets us to cooperate, rather, it’s seeing things in the light of what’s best for me is also necessarily good for you. If you suffer, the whole system suffers. That which damages the world I live in makes it less commodious for me. What do I gain from sitting in a multimillion dollar penthouse when around this corner there are slums, and that corner there are toxic waste dumps? The world is my neighborhood and I, selfishly, want all of it to be a nice place to live, everywhere.

To solve our problems, humans need to be nature’s central nervous system. We need to think globally, consider the whole picture, all of the interconnections, apply selfish cooperation and collective coordination. The continuation of the policy of shortsighted competitiveness and personal/regional/national myopic-selfishness, is a zero-sum game (Actually, it’s closer to 1 winner : 9 losers, a negative sum.), and an endless uphill battle. It’s unproductive, destructive, and wasteful. It’s unaffordable. And it’s too much work. All the fighting each other, all the lying, cheating and steeling takes a lot of effort, time, energy, and resources we can no longer squander. Instead, we could apply unified consideration, cooperation and coordination to end the eternal conflict. It’s a much easier way out : laid back and lazy.

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The [new] Mob

There is a new mob. You and I, and everyone we know, are part of it. We have freedoms no one could have dreamed of a hundred years ago. We have access to, and the power of, a Mob Medium that has transformed humanity on a global scale, and each of us on a personal level. With the possibilities and the capabilities enabled by the Mob Medium, we have new obligations, and serious responsibilities. If we don’t grab this opportunity, take control, and shepherd it for the benefit of all of us—our community, our country, our world, of all humankind—it’s going to be, instead, commandeered by minority forces that will abuse its power and turn it against us, the majority.

The word mob has negative connotations. Associated with unruly crowds or organized crime, it’s also, more neutrally, a reference to ordinary people—the commoners, the majority. Mob rule is another way of saying democracy. The word is derived from the Greek : demos, people or mob; kratia, power or rule. It could be taken a step further and called group rule, or group self-rule. We instinctively understand the importance of democracy. Whenever control is put in the hands of a single person, or a small number of people, we have abuses of power from the top down, and power struggles within the ruling class that have consequences throughout society. We have people in dominant positions taking undo advantage, subjecting the remaining majority to underclass status. They keep them there by economic coercion. They maintain their position with brute military and crude police force. They make the people minions of the oligarchy. But we have the possibility of a [new] mob, one enabled by a new medium.

The medium that has opened the floodgates for the mob is digital : the internet. This website is an exercise of this new freedom. It’s an excercise of the power enabled through it. Every blog, every noncommercial site, all the wikis, all the wealth of information (despite the loads of junk and misinformation), all the leaked secrets, are part of this new freedom. This is your new democratic power, provided you take on your role. Provided you don’t give away your power. Provided you take command of the opportunities.

Digital communication has changed the value of information. It has democratized information and knowledge, and the potentials they carry. Information is now worth zero, or infinity, either way you look at it no dollar amount can be put on it. This explains the feverish push for extensions of copyright ownership and stronger intellectual property laws by the corporate minority, while ignoring individual rights and suppressing the right to know. If these new potentials are not appropriated and controlled by the mob, we will be subjected to a new form of submission—oppression by data, data extortion, data-ocracy. Who controls the data, controls your life.

Free public libraries began in the US early in its history. They are a cornerstone for the dissemination of knowledge to the mob. Publicly funded for the public good to empower anyone who wishes to learn, and to learn at liberty. Public schools were another leap forward for American social equality. It became a basic right to provide education to all its citizens. Combined they form the foundation for a viable democracy. The internet gives us a new, two-way vehicle for sharing among ourselves all the knowledge humans have accumulated. Teaching to others and learning from others is the hallmark of human success.

Knowledge is a great equalizer. Free for the taking, the internet is an extraordinary resource for building and sustaining a real democracy. Free because the principles of democracy call for open access. Free because democracy requires an educated, well informed, and fully participating mob.

Knowledge is a great equalizer. Take advantage of these freedoms, use them, flex them, strengthen your self-ruling muscles. Your freedom of speech has never been greater—use it. Your freedom to access knowledge has never been greater, nor easier. Yet your freedoms are at risk.

WARNING : Keep in mind, this cannot be done through commercially controlled “social” media, or by the sharing of personal trivialities it encourages to distract us from the important issues. Commercial media are the antithesis of democracy in practice—and the bigger, more well known, more capitalized the source, the more those sources attempt to limit, manipulate, and profit from the information that belongs to you.

Knowledge is a great equalizer. Knowledge belongs to no one. Knowledge belongs to everyone. Knowledge, the freedom to learn, and the freedom to know is the fundamental freedom from which all other freedoms emanate.

Demand your right to know. Exercise your voice. Let information flow.

review : [Who Owns the Future?]
read : Imperial America : Reflections on The United States of Amnesia, Gore Vidal, Nation Books, 2004

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