miriam_e: from my drawing MoonGirl (Default)
[personal profile] miriam_e
Our societies have big, big problems if large groups of people can be either swept under the carpet or casually spurned as degenerate for no reason other than prejudice.

I was talking to my brother Peter yesterday about the Labour Party's apparent discrimination against gay people and their jumping on the anti-terrorism propaganda bandwagon. It looks like a shallow ploy by Labour to obtain the vote of the largest part of society possible, in the belief that most people are homophobic and easily frightened to hysteria. Peter felt that this was a reasonable thing to do as they (Labour) are far less evil than the terribly antisocial government we are currently lumbered with. I am very uneasy with this logic. If they can't stand up for minority groups in their pre-election lying campaign, what chance do we have of them behaving morally when they actually gain power? Granted they are not likely to be quite as corrupt as the current government, but recommending someone on the basis that they wouldn't hurt me as much as someone else would doesn't fill me with joy at the prospect of nevertheless being hurt.

Excuse me if I get this uneasy impression that the wicked powers that clasped John Howard to their bosom have dropped him now (note how he flounders lately), have slithered over to Mark Latham and are curling themselves about him. Sadly it looks to me like he is bargaining with the slimy beasts, thinking he can keep control. Poor fool. These scum never relinquish control, and if he gives up his morals this early in the fight then he is doomed. He will probably win the election, but he has already lost the only thing that matters.

It is difficult for me to believe sometimes that here we are in the 21st century where we have information about so much of the structure of the brain; we have sent robots out to many of the planets of our solar system; we can create virtual worlds inside immensely powerful computers; we can carry low cost computers in our pockets that are more powerful than machines that took up entire floors of skyscrapers a bare few decades ago; we are finally starting to uncover the basis of consciousness. And yet... and yet many people don't understand what a simple light switch does; vast numbers of people routinely believe in the most whacked-out, insane superstitions; it is common to consider arbitrary groups of people as subhuman in some way because of skin color, or religion, or sexuality, or lack of money.

I mean, gees!! I am an optimist, and I know things are getting better slowly, but oh how slow it feels. It really seems sometimes that it all balances on a knifedge, at the whim of superstitious cavemen.

Date: 2004-09-15 03:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] patchworkkid.livejournal.com
For a long time now I've looked at the news of an evening, and only two words are flashing in brain: "rabid apes". It's like the world is populated with them.

Some days I look at how the world works and get an inkling of how it must have felt for a member of the intelligentsia, being led through a screaming crowd, to the guillotine.

Date: 2004-09-15 06:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miriam-e.livejournal.com
Yeah, I know what you mean. I just don't watch the news anymore really.... well that's not completely true. I watch it on very rare occasions. It is just far too skewed and brainwashing. I have been amazed how even the ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation, for any foreiners reading this) have become somewhat corrupted too. Not to the extent that the commercial media have given themselves over wholeheartedly to the dark side, but it is still visible as a sinister undercurrent to some stories.

On the optimistic side I think most people are sufficiently smart to see past the worst of it. The proof of this is the anti-war marches. They had us all convinced the the majority of the population wanted such a war, but when we all spilled out of our rooms to find, to our great surprise, that there were many millions of us who didn't believe the crap laid on us. No matter how much we are told that we are alone, we are not. There are tens of millions of us... and probably many more than that.

Thank heavens for the net!!!

Date: 2004-09-15 07:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] patchworkkid.livejournal.com
So very true.

I was at that march, looked around, and hoped to God that at least 75% of them, come the day, wouldn't vote for Howard. I still hope that's the case.

Date: 2004-09-15 08:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miriam-e.livejournal.com
Call me paranoid, but I am starting to have grave suspicions about our voting system. I find it hard to believe that a majority voted for Howard last time. Considering the massive fraud and tampering with votes that goes on in USA, I expect we would have a great amount of fiddling here too. I can't believe that our system is so vastly superior to their one. For instance how do they have cemetaries of people voting and we don't? Deliberate 'losing' of votes might be easier to hide over there than here because voting isn't compulsory there, but on the other hand I don't know of anybody here who was fined for not voting, so maybe that happens here too. (People may actually get fined for not voting here; I may just never hear about it.)

It strikes me as just a little peculiar though. There are millions of dollars to be made and massive power to be garnered by perverting the voting system. You would think we would be hearing about people being found out all the time with such high stakes, but we hear nary a whisper.

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