Occupying spaces
For
most of us, ‘to occupy’ would mean that we define it in a spatial sense.
To many, it is what each of us perceive as our own and /or as defined by
social convention that become our space i.e. title deeds, the wata-kotu
(fences), our spheres of knowledge, influence and the extent of power we
can wield.
‘Space’ to some would mean the outer-space as we know it in terms of
man's attempt to conquer it. Space exploration missions to the moon,
mars etc would be examples.
Most
nations have an acquired sense of space that goes far beyond their own
territorial domains defined in the cartographic maps or by the tenants
of the law of the sea. Some such definitions have been or are being made
after much sacrifice of human and other forms of life in the many, many
wars that were or are fought to gain dominance over ‘space’, through
exercising the will to establish overt or covert power within such
ill-acquired spaces.
That comes from being ‘powerful’ in the sense of the desire, need and
the ability for dominance of other ‘less powerful’ or even ‘vulnerable’
nations or peoples infringing on their own defined territorial
integrity. Some have been acquired by harming Mother Nature causing her
ill health as we witness in the form of climate change and global
warming now. In most cases these have been disguised as being wars for
or efforts at establishing justice, democracy, creation of wealth,
goodwill and peace, when in fact they are nothing more than attempts to
gain access to vital resources and/or to challenge belief systems not
akin to that of the dominant.
That brings to mind what George Orwell, in his dystopian novel
‘1984’, published in 1949 told, referring to the state of perpetual war
in ‘Oceania’, his crafted society ruled by the oligarchic dictatorship
of the ‘Party’ administrated by a privileged inner party elite; “If you
want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stumping on a human face
for ever”. We heard and continue to hear much of this sentiment
emanating from the front-liners of the ‘Occupy Movement’, which actually
got me to wonder about the whole notion of ‘space'.
Shift of power
The concept of territorial integrity in essence is about space and
the rest comes as appendage. When we talk of economic and social power
shifts from the North to the South or the West to the East, we indeed
talk about space and what has been happening or not happening in that
space.
At another level popular science writer and physicist Marcus Chown in
his book The Quantum Zoo: A Tourist's Guide to the Never-ending Universe
published in 2005, using simple analogies and fun derivations thus
refers to space and its true nature “Space and time are both relative.
Lengths and time intervals become significantly warped at speeds
approaching the speed of light. One person's interval of space is not
the same as another person's interval of space. One person's interval of
time is not the same as another person's interval of time.”
Relativity
A bit out of steam, as in the real world and in our day-to-day chores
we would not be anywhere close to defining space and time in relation to
the speed of light, I was relieved by his next quote from Einstein which
placed it in a better light “When a man sits with pretty girl for an
hour, it seems like a minute, but let him sit on a hot stove for a
minute-it's longer than an hour. That's relativity”.
In the Buddha word, space refers to emptiness or Shunayatha. ‘The
concept of the zero’ as Zen teaching has it, refers to a state where any
space, physical or made of the mind can be usefully and positively
functional in a space-time sense, the ultimate emptiness being that of
Nirvana, a state devoid of time or space.
Occupy movements
You may wonder why I got into this discourse on the idea of space and
its occupation. It is because of what is happening in the world around
us and in particular the ‘Occupy Wall Street’ type movements that are
gaining wide spread ground on the real domain and on social media. It is
on hearing the call of the 99 percent.
In an article released late last week, Bruce E. Levine, an occupy
movement activist, clinical psychologist and author of “Get Up, Stand
Up: Uniting Populists, Energizing the Defeated, and Battling the
Corporate Elite” unfolded a story on alternet.org which should shock us
all. Its title “How Ayn Rand seduced generations of young men and helped
make the U.S. into a selfish, greedy nation.”
I must confess, I had not known anything about Ayn Rand or what
influence she has had on the youth in the US as claimed by the author
till then, but was shocked to read what he had to say.
Negative influence
He wrote “Only rarely in U.S. history did writers transform us to
become a more caring or less caring nation. In the 1850s, Harriet
Beecher Stowe (1811-1896) was a strong force in making the United States
a more humane nation, one that would abolish slavery of African
Americans. A century later, Ayn Rand (1905-1982) helped make the United
States into one of the most uncaring nations in the industrialized
world, a neo-Dickensian society where healthcare is only for those who
can afford it, and where young people are coerced into huge student-loan
debt that cannot be discharged in bankruptcy.
Rand's impact has been widespread and deep. At the iceberg's visible
tip is the influence, she's had over major political figures who have
shaped American society. In the 1950s, Ayn Rand read aloud drafts of
what was later to become Atlas Shrugged to her 'Collective' which was
Rand's ironic nickname for her inner circle of young individualists,
which included Alan Greenspan, who would serve as chairman of the
Federal Reserve Board from 1987 to 2006, former US President Ronald
Reagan and many other influential US political leaders whose names and
the association with Rand, Levine unfolds.
Self-interest
In Levin's words when he was a kid, his reading “included comic books
and Rand's The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged.” He added, “There wasn't
much difference between the comic books and Rand's novels in terms of
the simplicity of the heroes. What was different was that unlike
Superman or Batman, Rand made selfishness heroic, and she made caring
about others a weakness.”
Rand said, “Capitalism and altruism are incompatible....The choice is
clear-cut: either a new morality of rational self-interest, with its
consequences of freedom, justice, progress and man's happiness on
earth-or the primordial morality of altruism, with its consequences of
slavery, brute force, stagnant terror and sacrificial furnaces.” For
many young people, hearing that it is 'moral' to care only about oneself
became intoxicating, and some get addicted to this idea for life he
said.
Seeds of justice
The celebrated American writer Gore Vidal who was in Sri Lanka for
the Galle Literary Festival in 2008 is quoted to say “Thanks in part to
Rand, the United States is one of the most uncaring nations in the
industrialized world. Ayn Rand's ‘philosophy” is nearly perfect in its
immortality, which makes the size of her audience all the more ominous
and symptomatic as we enter a curious new phase in our society.... to
justify and extol human greed and egotism is to in my mind is not only
immoral, but evil”, he added.
Spaces available for occupying are many. They can also be defined in
any which way to fit our own desires and needs. Yet, there is what is
right, just, moral and fair. Spaces that are filled with the right
thoughts and deeds will sow the seeds that will form an anti-thesis to
the picture Orwell painted in his 1984. The future Orwell saw is now and
it is time that there is a redefining of how spaces are used, by whom
for what. They certainly must not be occupied by the likes of Ayn Rand
followers as described by Levine.
renton@wow.lk |