Jonathots Daily Blog
(2237)
There are two simple ways to immediately improve your life.
First, get rid of all your committees.
Second, start doing some rendition of what resembles your dream and then be prepared to change.
Since our present society is completely unable or unwilling to pursue either of these options, then please settle in for a long winter’s nap of repetitive nonsense. And one of the main pieces of nonsense is the ongoing droning drivel that “somebody should do something.”
Let us understand–somebody already has.
- We wouldn’t have cures for disease if they hadn’t.
- Slaves would not be freed without somebody doing something.
- Salvation for the human soul would never have been accomplished from a “do nothing” Savior.
It isn’t like we have to come up with our own idea or create a world unto itself–unique to our circumstances–to accomplish good deeds. There are many paths set before us, tremendous options and inspiring tales to thrust us forward in the direction of accomplishment.
We are reluctant–both as a species and then, as individuals.
Why?
There are two nasty principles that were ingrained in us at a young age, no matter what culture we came from.
- Don’t make a fool of yourself.
- Leave well enough alone.
For some reason, as a race, we learned these much more easily than we did long division. Maybe it’s because we’re basically insecure, and both of these concepts feed that timidity, making it easier for us to remain stagnant.
Maybe it’s because indifference burns fewer calories and allows for more naps. I don’t know.
But the end result is a disgruntled multitude, complaining about the absence of leadership while simultaneously resisting any prophetic voice that would advance a new theory.
You have to make up your mind. If you want to extol the status quo, do so, but please never complain about the blandness of your grits. Or … prepare yourself for the shock that if anything is going to be done, to look any further than your own motivation is an exercise in futility.
Because there is really only one moving part in the human experience–only one thing that separates an Abraham Lincoln from an Adolph Hitler. Both men were bigoted in their own way. Both men took office believing that a particular sect or race of human beings was inferior. Both individuals had a certain dictatorial style to their rule. (Yes, Abraham Lincoln was called a dictator.)
The difference between Abraham and Adolph is that when information was given to Mr. Lincoln to prove that slavery was wrong, dangerous and god-forbidden–he changed.
On the other hand, when the armies of the Soviet Union and the United States were perched on the outskirts of Berlin and it was obvious to everyone–including Chancellor Hitler, that the war was over, he literally dug into his bunker and permitted the slaughter of an additional quarter of a million people to justify his foolishness.
Therefore, saying that somebody needs to do something is an ugly blending of self-pity and stubbornness.
And self-pity and stubbornness are the main attributes of all the inhabitants of hell.
A footrnote: muich thanks to my dear brother from yesterday morning at Algood, who told me his pet peeve was the phrase, “somebody needs to do something.”
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