Categories
Politics

The wisdom of parables…

The thing about parables is the story does not have to be true for the lesson to be valid. We often use parables in the form of fairy tales, Disney movies, or even scriptural stories to teach children important lessons about life. Adults too can benefit from parables.

Consider the scriptural parable of the rich man and Lazarus. The story involves a beggar (Lazarus) living outside the front gate of a wealthy family’s estate. Every day, the members of the family pass Lazarus as they enter the beautiful estate compound without giving Lazarus any consideration. Finally, the patriarch of the family dies and is condemned to eternal suffering. He is made to suffer as Lazarus suffered because he had every opportunity to relieve Lazarus’ suffering and chose instead to offer him scorn and indifference. He is told every member of his family who does nothing for Lazarus will suffer the same fate. Therefore, his suffering is deepened by the realization that his example will condemn all his loved ones to eternal damnation.

What is the lesson of the rich man and Lazarus?

For years I thought the lesson was to do unto others as you would have them do to you. Most recently, I have come to understand that wealth necessarily causes deprivation. To accumulate resources beyond our capacity to use, denies resources to other people who desperately need them. Therefore, the morale of the story is not the rich man’s lack of generosity, it is the rich man’s gluttony that caused Lazarus’ deprivation.

In America today, we are the rich man because our wealth is derived from our disproportionate, non-sustainable extraction of global resources for ourselves. And Lazarus is the billions of resource deprived people who are slowly migrating to the front gate of the American estate.

Where once our front gate was opened wide :

“Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore, Send these, the homelesstempest-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”*

Now we close the gate, build walls, and offer scorn to the refugees who only seek the promise of what America used to be.

*Public Domain Excerpt from “The New Colossus” written by Emma Lazarus, and posted on a plaque on the base of the Statue of Liberty.

Categories
Social Evolution

Out with the old; In with the new.

Do we really require human deprivation in order to feel special?

We can enjoy all the pleasures of privilege without subjugating others. The key is removing the need for accumulation by guaranteeing everyone has access to the resources they can use to reach their full potential.

Consider dinner at home with your family. No one lunges at the food with the intent to take as much as they can, because everyone knows they are guaranteed to get their full share.

In this emerging new society, waste is the primary vice that virtue must eradicate. Prestige is tied to how much we each contribute to the well being of humanity. Human progress will accelerate based on the proliferation of our individual potential.

If my proposition sounds too lofty for your sensibilities, you remain constrained by the old paradigm…scarcity. Let me be blunt. Scarcity is caused by the incentive to accumulate, which is necessary when you are not guaranteed access to resources. This old paradigm has proven to be unsustainable.

Faced with mass migration induced by resource deprivation, resource hoarding societies will either impose apartheid style immigration policies or experience unmanageable population growth.

Thankfully a new alternative is emerging: a full access, resource based, global economy. Yet for this well documented alternative to be viable, each of us must reconsider our values. How do we best advance the well being of ourselves and our families? By maximizing the ability of every person to contribute to our global well being.