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Dubya bin Laden by Bob Wallace I'm
not sure how it started. I think it was while watching Pinky and the Brain with a roomful of people.
Children, teenagers, adults of all ages.
All were laughing at the antics of a bulb-headed mutated lab mouse
who wanted to conquer the world, with the aid of his dim-witted,
hyperactive, worshipping sidekick. They
failed every time with their Rube Goldberg plans, yet never gave up. What
nerve did this program touch? I
thought about it for a long time. The
cartoon had to be mythic, to be so hugely popular.
I decided Brain was just a fictional version of every nut--Hitler
or Stalin, for example--who wanted to conquer huge chunks of the world, if
not the whole thing. His sin
was hubris, or pride: arrogance and ignorance.
Believing he could do no wrong, no matter how much wrong he did.
The story that described him best was that of Satan, who thought he
could be God. Pinky?
Pinky was Mass Man. Hyperactive, loud, not very bright, always
thinking Brain knew what he was doing, no matter what catastrophes he led
both of them into. Except for the fact he is more independent, think Homer
Simpson turned into a mouse. The
cartoon, I realized, was profound. It
embodied a great truth. Think
of Bush and all those call him "my President."
An arrogant, ignorant man leading his clueless worshippers over a
cliff. The late Osama bin
Laden and those who believe in him? Same
thing as Bush and his. Neither
side understands the other, but all are the same.
An ignorant, arrogant Brain and a bunch of blind, dim-witted,
Pinkyesque followers. Osama
bin Bush. Dubya bin Laden.
In many ways the same man, raised in a different culture and a
different religion. Their
followers are the same, too. Why
should human nature be different on the other side of the world? I
noticed that Brain never apologized, ever.
Bush has never apologized, either, for those non-existent Weapons
of Mass Destruction or for those over 1,000 dead Americans.
Nor bin Laden, for his horrendous miscalculations that cost him his
life, which I'm sure he never expected.
Apparently he thought the Those
who never apologize believe they are never wrong.
They're fanatics. Don't
they in a sense believe they are perfect, if they never apologize? Perhaps
that's why humility is such a virtue.
I don't think it means to humble yourself, or to grovel.
I think it means to understand that one is imperfect, makes
mistakes, and should apologize for them.
And try not to make those mistakes again.
And if you can't stop making them, quit your job. Pinky
and the Brain may have been the
catalyst, but the ideas went beyond the cartoon.
In real life, leaders afflicted with hubris always engage in
black-or-white thinking. Bush
sure does, believing he is engaged in a contest between Good and Evil.
And I'm sure the other side thinks exactly the same thing, with the
roles reversed. And there is
no one more liable to murder than someone who is convinced he is
absolutely in the right, and dealing with someone he truly believes to be
evil who is trying to destroy everything. Each
side also believes God supports them, indeed, He talks to their leaders!
I will never take seriously anyone who says God talks to him.
In fact, I'll consider them for what they are--wackos.
If anyone says God talks to him, he'd better make the lame walk and
the blind see. Bush
claims he is a Christian, doing God's will.
But he's engaging in mass murder and mass theft, having invaded and
conquered two other countries.
If he thinks that's what God supports, how exactly is anyone
supposed to tell the difference between God and Satan? If
someone claims he is doing God's will, isn't what he's really saying is
that his will and God's are one and the same?
That's probably the greatest blasphemy there is: claiming Man is
God. It's
not in the cartoon, either, but those who conquer almost always wish to do
it for the victim's own "good."
As both Jesus and Aesop noticed, all tyrants call themselves
"benefactors." Bush
wants to "drain the swamp" and install the leftist pipe-dream of
democracy in the I
came to the conclusion one of the worst things anyone can do is to split
people into pure Good and pure Evil. That
only exists in comic books. In
real life, it's more along the lines of Hubris and the Sacrificed:
I am Good, you are Evil, so I am going to dehumanize and sacrifice
you so only the Good will remain. But
it never works out that way. It
certainly didn't work for the Nazis and the Communists, who murdered an
awful lot of people in the eternally hopeless quest to bring Heaven to
earth. Black-or-white
thinking invariably leads to terrible problems.
Those who define themselves as Good and others as Evil become
paranoid, because they think the Evil is always attempting to destroy
them. It used to be that 20th
Century Paranoid Guy was convinced the Nazis and the Communists were going
to conquer the world, now 21st Century Paranoid Guy believes "Islamo-fascists"
are going to take over the planet. And
I'm sure those "Islamo-fascists" are convinced we're
going to conquer and destroy them. The
power of those defined as evil is always grotesquely exaggerated.
They become larger-than-life, inhuman monsters who'll destroy us
and conquer the world . . . even if they have no armies, navies or air
forces. There
are an awful lot of problems that come from black-or-white thinking:
hubris, scapegoating, paranoia, hate, self-deception, rationalization, Brain
always failed to conquer the world, as has every real-life, would-be world
conqueror. He always conked
his head and staggered around dizzily.
That's what the Greeks called hubris, followed by nemesis.
It always happens when people think they are Good and everyone else
is Evil. Hubris followed by
nemesis is a wise lesson--from a cartoon, of all places--to which people
should pay more attention. discuss this column in the forum Bob Wallace has a degree in Journalism, is a former reporter and editor, and has been published at LewRockwell.com, Sierra Times, and The Libertarian Enterprise. |