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KoKo

(84,711 posts)
Tue May 6, 2014, 09:02 PM May 2014

"The Global Nightmares of the Young Exterminatory Worlds, Then and Now"

'Who knows how the young of today are processing the nightmares of our present world?' In high school, I was one of those kids you probably loved to loath. You know, the one who grabbed a front-row seat and every time the teacher asked a question waved his hand so manically that he was practically screaming, me, me, call on me! But truth be told, amid all the things that made me unhappy in those years, school -- actual schoolwork -- wasn’t one of them. Yes, I was confounded by the math problems in which the current of a river flowed at one speed and a boat was heading the other way at a different speed, and a few more bits of weird information were tossed into the eddies and you were supposed to do something with it all. But generally speaking I enjoyed school.

I liked my teachers -- at least the ones who challenged me to think or, as we would start saying only a few years after I was out of high school, "blew my mind," the ones who seemed to bend the world in interesting directions. I liked to learn. I liked to read by myself in my room. I went to the local library regularly and came home with piles of books. I was a dino-nerd (with the American Museum of Natural History’s T. rex on the brain), and a Civil War nut (no Bruce Catton volume went unread) with a sideline in advanced sci-fi. And it being the 1950s, I harbored the sort of nuclear fears that you barely thought about and didn’t really speak about, but that, in my case, appeared repetitively in unsettling dreams in which I found myself wandering through an atomically devastated world.

I was, above all, fascinated by history, in part perhaps because my parents were of a post-immigrant generation in flight from their past. Undoubtedly, that fascination represented an early, particularly nerdish form of rebellion (not that anyone noticed). Perhaps it was also comforting to nail myself into a narrative of American life in those years when the past, as my parents and so many other Americans saw it, was hardly worth thinking about, not when the future was so promising.

But let me hasten to add that not every class in high school thrilled me. There was, for instance, my American history teacher. He was a grey-haired ancient (though undoubtedly younger than I am now) who had, we kids then assumed, been passing news of the New World on to students since at least 1776. He must once have been inspirational, but by the time I came along he was lecturing off ancient notes on yellowed paper. I used to imagine those notes dissolving into a cloud of dust with the first gust of wind through the window by his desk. I was then teaching myself a version of American history at home at night and I couldn’t have found the daytime version less impressive.

The textbook we used then -- I still have it -- was Living in Our America: A Record of Our Country, History for Young Citizens. Unit One (“The Beginnings”) started with this poem:

“In our great country can be found factories
with parking lots of full of automobiles --
not just cars of officials and factory owners,
but cars of the workmen, too.

“These cars are something more than pieces of
machinery to own and ride around in.

“They are symbols.

“They are symbols that in our country we can
and do earn much more
than a bare living.

“They are symbols, too, that their owners are free --
free to live in city, town, or country,
free to move on to other work,
free to seek other ways of life,
free in body and spirit.”

I’m sure history texts are just as uninspiring today, but in different ways. After all, I was living then in the American Age of Steel, so long gone that -- who can remember?

On Becoming a “Red Chinese” Subject

Recently, going through some old files, I stumbled across an artifact from the ruins of that era. A map I had made on a single piece of white paper hidden inside that very history book, open-faced on my desk while I fiddled away my time, bored out of my gourd, barely listening to our teacher drone on. That document is as much an artifact of a lost world as the poem, but far more complex and confusing.

It was a map of the Chinese conquest of the world, which I drew in perhaps 1959 on that piece of paper onto which I had carefully traced the outlines of all the continents. While my teacher discussed the Constitution, I took the cartographical look of the U.S. military’s Pacific island-hopping campaign of World War II, globalized it, and set it in an unimaginable future nine years distant. The map is labeled -- yes, I actually labeled it -- “War Ends Oct. 6, 1968,” and by then, in case you’re wondering, the Chinese have it all, the whole kit and caboodle, the complete planet, from Australia to the Soviet Union, where in my handwriting it says, “Russia surrenders, Sept. 1968, including Moscow, Stalingrad & other areas.



Tom Englehardt

MORE AT:

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/05/06-2

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"The Global Nightmares of the Young Exterminatory Worlds, Then and Now" (Original Post) KoKo May 2014 OP
"Who knows how the young of today are processing the nightmares of our present world?" Scootaloo May 2014 #1
Not really, Scoot; the evidence doesn't say that it's too late. None of it does, actually. AverageJoe90 May 2014 #2
I don't know what you're reading... Scootaloo May 2014 #3
 

Scootaloo

(25,699 posts)
1. "Who knows how the young of today are processing the nightmares of our present world?"
Tue May 6, 2014, 11:18 PM
May 2014

Well, none of us are going to pretend that two pop stars staying in bed in their manhattan apartment is going to cure the world of its ills, for one...

Thing is, Climate change is sort of like those old nuclear worries. Except with climate change, the bombs have all been dropped, the missiels have been fired, and it just takes a while for the blast to reach you. Like that movie, On The Beach.

It's too late. The damage is done, there's no pulling it back in. All you can really do is resign yourself to the imheritence that your parents have chosen to leave you - Which keeps getting smaller, and smaller, and smaller.

 

AverageJoe90

(10,745 posts)
2. Not really, Scoot; the evidence doesn't say that it's too late. None of it does, actually.
Wed May 7, 2014, 02:16 AM
May 2014

I can understand your pessimism, but there really is nothing that says it's too late.....and quite a bit of evidence that says it's not.

 

Scootaloo

(25,699 posts)
3. I don't know what you're reading...
Wed May 7, 2014, 04:03 AM
May 2014

But even if we went cold turkey, globally, shut off carbon emissions... what we've already dropped into the atmosphere is still gong to have its effect. The only thing we can do right now, is stop accelerating; the brakes are busted. it's just the way it works, I'm afraid. All that carbon is staying there for a long time to come. And the problems it causes cascade exponentially; we're at the crest of a hill with a nice long tumble in front of us.

Well, some of us, anyway. The generations that caused the problem, and worked so hard to keep causing the problem because it was easier and cheaper than dealing with it, aren't going to suffer much of the consequences of their decisions and planning. Which I suppose makes it easier for them to keep on doing it.

Of course there's a hard cap to how much we can burn - basically the laws of supply and demand hit. Petroleum becomes too expensive and valuable to use to commute around. But all our alternatives depend on petroleum to "prime the pump." alternative energy becomes extraordinary high demand with a naturally low supply - further bottle-necked by gouging.

Do you want to think about what happens when the energy infrastructure falls apart, on top of what effects that infrastructure has had on the world?

Odds are you won't have to.

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