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by Pablo Ouziel
In the chaotic “west” it is often difficult to gain the attention of the public, but one must be committed to trying due to the severity of our current existential crisis. We are psychotic as a society, we have become so dumb and manipulable that we are truly being led towards digging our own grave and smiling while working. We cannot go on like this. We cannot pretend that we are a decent society with good intentions any longer. We are not! The “west” as a civilization is corrupt and decrepit, “we” are not the bearers of morality in the eyes of the “other” peoples. We are not an exemplary civilization which people admire and adulate. We are too arrogant and ignorant to realize, that we are seen by the “others” like the enemy, because “we” are.
As a collective of people, the “west” believes itself to be the holder of the truth, the one which understands what is good for the world. This “west” doesn’t exist however, it is a figment of our imagination, a division which has been indoctrinated to make us feel we are superior. Through “our” education systems, “our” media, “our” governments, “our” corporations, “our” art. We are so indoctrinated in industrialized information societies, that we regurgitate to each other the propaganda which is fed to us on a daily basis. This situation must change, because we are collapsing and it can only be reversed by the collective strength of the whole population. Otherwise we will be bombed out of our homes by those we so love to call terrorists. They are terrorists, but terror is what “we” are bringing to their lands and their homes, and that is why they are terrorizing “us”.
As peoples in industrialized information societies, we are
looking at the world like a big videogame in which we can solve
everyone’s problems because we are civilized. We are not! We have huge
internal problems. Inside “our” walls, big CEO’s are earning $400
million for their exploits in the oil of other countries, while illegal
immigrants are scrambling for work inside “our” factories. We have
millions of people loosing their homes, while banks are being saved
thanks to our taxes. If inside our walls, we are leaving our own people
behind, we are watching our neighbors lose their jobs and doing little
to help them. How can we expect those outside of our walls to trust us
when we tell them we are going to help them?
How can we
expect the evil military dictatorship of Myanmar to feel comfortable
accepting our help? After all, the last time Cuba offered Americans
help with Katrina, their help was rejected and the “world” accepted it
as normal. Normal, while American people where dying and there were not
enough professional hands to help. We in the industrialized information
society believe that while “they” have evil dictators, “we” have
benevolent democratic institutions which are the choice of the people.
But we are blinding ourselves from the reality which we are blatantly
living. Our democratic institutions are in the hands of very powerful
organizations, our corporations are not ours, they belong to very
powerful groups. Our legal system is built to defend those interests,
and the media is one of their many propaganda tools. Even our churches
are infested with blood money, yet many go to church to feel good about
themselves.
How can Christians for example feel good, when they
see the cross blessing western soldiers going to kill in Iraq? We have
destroyed that country, we should all be confessing our guilt, not
blessing our soldiers. The biggest blessing those innocent young
“killing machines” could have, is to be brought back to their land,
with all their limbs in place, and given some therapy. They need it
after having been manipulated into committing such terrible crimes
against the people of Iraq.
How
can we honestly believe that while our governments have done such a
horrible thing in Iraq, their intentions are good everywhere else? But
that is a very difficult question to ask oneself and therefore only the
bravest make the effort. The answer is not a pleasant one. In the
industrialized information society, we should all go to bed tonight
trying hard to see our own reality. We must understand that we are the
oppressors holding the rest of the world hostage in order to maintain
our power. In Iraq last week our media announced that while the whole
country is in ruin, a Disneyworld will be built outside of the Green
Zone, and nobody reacted. After the Tsunami in 2004, five star
beachfront resorts for the rich were raised where once laid the
foundations of fishermen homes, nobody reacted then. Yet we do react
when Myanmar rejects our help. I would reject it, looking ahead at the
consequences for the country.
In the industrialized
information society we only have two ways of going to help. Either we
come with the barrel of the gun backed by fake diplomacy, destroying
countries to borrow their resources. Or we go to help with our NGO’s
and then our companies follow for the reconstruction, building
factories and offices for our companies, resorts for the rich, and
retirement homes for the old. Either way, the locals always end up
working for us. I have seen it with my own eyes, I do not need the
television to tell me. Once in Laos, I saw a group of fat rich and ugly
European NGO directors, getting drunk inside a posh restaurant
discussing the future development of that country. In the meantime, the
local chauffer waited outside for hours in his impeccable white uniform
with white gloves, in an impeccably clean white luxury 4x4. That pretty
much defines through my own experience the way we “develop” peoples
like to go around the world helping. It is sad but it is very true. I
understand why the Myanmar government is rejecting our help. This
doesn’t mean that I agree with dictatorships, it just means that we
should look at our own belly before observing that of our neighbor’s.
People in Haiti or Gaza a few weeks ago, or today would welcome the
help we are willing to offer Myanmar. Give it to them, after all there
are so many to help in the world, that we shouldn’t be making
politicized media events out of the misery of others.

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