A single piece of literature, taught in classrooms across the
country, has become one of the leftist oligarchy's most potent
utensils for molding the minds of students. It is a fictional
novel written by one, Daniel Quinn, and it shrouds with pretense
of virtue a majority of the collectivist, antiprogressive
doctrines spread by the establishment. The book correctly
describes a rivalry between modern "intellectual" trends
(beginning with the hippie movements of the 1960s, which it
praises without restraint) and the values of Western culture and
human civilization.
In
this novel, Ishmael, a gorilla capable of telepathic
communication, transmits a truly animal ideology to a narrator who
absorbs it as would a sponge, without logical analysis or an
evaluation of the premises his "mentor" presents. The story of
their meetings, as presented in the book, is merely the background
for a delusional system admittedly in support of stagnation and
opposed to human intervention with and mastery of the world. The
gorilla divides the cultural perspectives of humans into two
opposing camps, that of the Takers, i.e. the creators of
technological civilization from the dawn of agriculture on, and
that of the Leavers, i.e. the undeveloped hunter-gatherer tribes
who utilize natural resources only to an extent which would permit
them subsistence. Shockingly enough, the gorilla and its creator
write in favor of the latter group.
Mr. Quinn is
an adherent of the Malthusian blunder that food growth and
population growth occur at varying rates and the former will never
reach a level sufficient for the latter. He states that the world
is to become increasingly plagued with famine as man's capacity to
produce food is amplified. He does not, however, present a valid
empirical correlation to draw such a conclusion from. The
theoretical hypotheses of Thomas Malthus bear no validity in a
condition where the countries in which starvation is rampant are
the ones least industrially developed, located in regions of
Africa and some parts of Southeast Asia (the only reasons for the
despicable states of which can be drawn from the dictatorial
regimes, restricting free enterprise, which had formed there
following the withdrawal of imperialistic European powers whose
presence had caused living standards to surge dramatically during
the late 19th, early 20th centuries). The United States, the most
capitalistic and technically prominent nation in the world
produces a sufficient quantity of food in its central regions
(i.e. in the so-called Midwest, the "breadbasket" of the country)
to support a third of the world's population! The remainder is
produced by other First World nations with superb agricultural
capacities. The tyrants of backward, non-Western orders of chaos,
however, willfully withhold supplies from their populace, as
corresponds to the typical behavior of creatures who seek power as
an end-in-itself (outlined in 1984 by Mr. Orwell), in order
to inflict suffering upon the people and cause them to crawl
before the despots on their bellies begging for a bite. This was
precisely the strategy of Somali warlord Mohammed Farrah Aidid
whose hoarding of grain resulted in a famine costing 700,000 lives
and served as cause for a humanitarian relief effort on the behalf
of the United Nations in 1992-1993. Should the free nations of the
world collaborate with the oppressed citizens of Third World
regimes to unseat such despots and institute free-market
economies, over a continent of arable territory shall become
available to development by prodigious capitalistic interests. It
is a lack of liberty, not a deficiency in resources that had
resulted in famines throughout the most bloody and primitive
places of the world.
Even in the
United States, however, one-half of the land is not merely
untouched by human hands but designated by bureaucratic
restrictions on human progress (which will be discussed further)
as "wilderness preserves." Should they be rendered available for
refinement, the world's carrying capacity would soar into the tens
of billions, yielding ever greater numbers of resolute, creative
individuals, who will from sheer aspiration become a new
generation of scientists, technicians, engineers, and businessmen,
fighting to colonize mankind's newest frontier, space, to realize
the noble dream of human settlement on other worlds and the
terraforming technology necessary for such an accomplishment.
Overpopulation and a lack of material means are ludicrous myths
invented by the antiprogressives in order to stall such a glorious
ascent. Ishmael exploits such rubbish to the fullest extent
possible, concocting from it the "Parable of the Taker
Thunderbolt" a metaphorical airplane, designed by trial and error,
said to embody Western culture. This contraption, supposedly
launched from an extraordinarily tall precipice, continues to
plummet while its pilot misinterprets this condition as one of
flight. The fitting response to such an analogy is that it
possesses no concrete facts to justify that this is indeed the
situation of civilized man. Had he lived on the verge of the 20th
century, Mr. Quinn would have been one of the fear-driven pundits
who proclaimed that powered flight was an impossible fantasy. He
foolishly neglects the fact that modern airplanes are designed not
through arbitrary trials but with extensive knowledge of
aerodynamics, gravity, Newton's third law (to achieve propulsion
through the burning of fuel in the opposite direction to that of
the vehicle's flight), and other physical principles, that
millions of successful flights have already enabled a more
prosperous economy, greater convenience for individuals, and the
strengthening of the military arsenal of the free world.
Similarly, True Western culture, i.e. the functional and enduring
aspects of civilization, is based upon science, upon the study of
the Absolute Reality in order to become the master of Nature
instead of its slave. Technology is not a haphazard buildup of
materials without assurance of functionality. It is a deliberate,
consciously planned endeavor which takes into full account an
accordance with facts of reality that Mr. Quinn claims to
support. Mr. Quinn, unlike the typical Witch Doctor, recognizes
that man, in order to survive, must seek to fathom an objective
reality and an objective morality. His conclusions concerning the
identity of those could not, however, have been more flawed.
Ishmael employs other myths such as global warming and the
depletion of the ozone layer (the absolute lies contained in which
shall be discussed in an essay where they are more pertinent) in
order to instill the impression that mankind on its present path
(or the path undertaken in an ideally capitalist and
technology-valuing society, of which the present path is but a
shadow) is destined to destroy itself and the world. The premises
from which he draws such a scenario are, however, opposed to the
very Absolute Reality man must utilize for his survival. The
remedy he offers is a state of living as animals, without
attempting to seize control of one's environment. He is deluded to
think that the lack of surplus, the condition of hunter-gatherer
tribes, is the key to preventing massive famine and
"overpopulation." He concedes, however, that this implies the
return of man to the quagmire of the ecosystem, where a slight
shift in the quantities of a species on any level could bring
about catastrophic consequences for the rest. The Leavers, he
states, will accept a circumstantial famine and the deaths of
their fellow tribesmen as routine, because they do not believe
that man should possess the power of life and death, to determine
whether they as individuals are worthy of survival. This is, then,
an ideology of submission to a mystical "higher" force known as
the status quo, the stagnation of the Wilderness, which spells
only lifelong suffering during a pitifully short individual life
span. Mr. Quinn does not grant the individual objective value as
an end in himself (unlike the philosophies of Mr. Locke, Monsieur
de Voltaire, and Ms. Rand, the implementation of which has
resulted in the superb living standards enjoyed by many residents
of First World countries, who recognize their own value and the
necessity of productive and willful genius to emerge unhampered
and elevate the human condition). It is, in effect, a collectivist
dogma preaching obsequy to the arbitrarily designated whole which
includes all but man's deliberate influence. Mr. Quinn's
vision is one of natural evolution resulting in improved sentience
and complexity in organisms over millions of years. But that is
not going to ameliorate conditions for any one existing at
present. His vague scheme, if somehow materialized, would slash
two-thirds off of men's lives and hurl them into a situation where
creative independence is no longer a possibility, as it is not in
animals.
It
is this relinquishing of self-sufficiency which causes within the
brain to surface a replacement, the whimsical dictates of
“instinct”, which are the root of collectivist obedience. This is
precisely the reason why hunter-gatherer tribes, glorified by Mr.
Quinn, exist in communistic tribal systems, where private property
is impossible, where status distinctions are repressed, where
merit and, hence, an unregulated meritocratic hierarchy, are
unattainable. A Leaver tribe and an animal herd exist on the same
level of pure Wilderness. A single member is considered expendable
and will be sacrificed for the sake of a vague and therefore
persisting "whole". Mr. Quinn seeks species preservation, yet he
neglects to realize that in a pristinely natural state, 99% of all
species ever in existence have disappeared into the abyss of the
extinct, eradicated either by a cataclysm such as an asteroid or a
volcanic eruption, or by small events offsetting the balance of
"ecosystems" and triggering their destruction.
A toleration
of ecosystems implies, of course, the continued existence and
proliferation of various insects, pests, bacteria, and viruses,
which are "links in a natural chain". It condones massive
infestation of complex organisms by parasitic creatures not worthy
of existence because they possess naught but a built-in scheme for
destruction. The natural "balance" is itself a myth. The Second
Law of Thermodynamics, the decay of complex forms of energy into
primitive ones, suggests that the Wilderness is a setting of
turbulent motion toward the simplest stage of them all, pure heat.
Nature's evolution, eventually, is destined toward not the
creation of ever more complex organisms, but their elimination.
Only man and his technologies, converting simple forms of energy,
such as the heat from steam, into intricate ones, such as the
mechanical energy of an engine, are able to preclude such a dreary
destruction of the entire universe, of existence as can be
possibly fathomed. The trend of entropy can be reversed only
through the advancement and proliferation of humankind in an
unchecked manner. Yet this can only be founded upon an
individualist moral framework where the creativity of greatness is
permitted to devise solutions to the obstacles erected by the
source of all evil, the Wilderness, whence both natural calamity
and the whimsical arbitrariness of irrational men are derived.
Hence the reason for the Witch Doctors' opposition to such a
struggle and for their support of Ishmael.
That
Mr. Quinn cloaks his writings in pseudo-objective reality only
further fuels the deception, hoping to draw devoted absolutists
into the relativist camp. Through its unquestioning belief in
unreal phenomena such as overpopulation and global warming,
Ishmael encourages the passive acceptance of information as
presented by the dominant clique of academic experts, i.e. from
precisely the persons who, through their
altruist/collectivist-inspired adherence to the willful
institution of human suffering, have invented apocalyptic
scenarios in order to deceive persons into identifying a virtuous
motive behind their agenda. It is relativism with pretense to
knowledge of actuality. After all, evil as such cannot be
voluntarily embraced by a decent human being, especially by a
resident of the West, and thus must remain masked so that it is
granted moral sanction. Mr. Quinn pretends to be a rebel against
the so-called Mother Culture, that of the Takers. But he preaches
a deeper submission, a greater obsequy which seeks to imprison man
within the dismal chasm of oblivion.
The
"wisdom" and "accuracy" of Ishmael is not questioned within
the classrooms. It is viewed as a sacred canon. The author himself
had witnessed its teaching. Those opposed to the dogma possess
such ample means of refutation in terms of argument, but nothing
in terms of time allotted to them by the instructors to present
their case. Students report with exhilaration that this book is "a
life-changing experience". Editorial comments upon the book's back
cover have prompted them to declare this while continually sinking
into the suicidal depression brought about by allegiance to the
book's true statement on a global scale, that of the self's
worthlessness, that of the individual's expendability. Ishmael
is a collectivist's dream world, a means to the wanton infliction
of suffering Mr. Orwell and Ms. Rand had warned us about. |