(MORNINGTHOTS)
There’s this idea: The people who have the most money will make the best decisions for the country. Here in the United States, where I live, everyone believes that that idea is correct: nobody questions it – not one person. The U.S. Constitution is firmly grounded in this idea, which is why it establishes a system that is easy to control for those who are wealthy, and hard to move for those who lack money. Then, even the people who are highly critical of financial interests, who decry the too-heavy influence of big business and mega-corporations – even these opponents of the propertied class, whenever they voice any criticism, will always add, in earnest, as a caveat: “We need to respect the Constitution.” To everyone, the term unconstitutional is pejorative.
Mobsters took over your neighborhood, and after seeing the cruel way that they treated everyone, you stood up and delivered a speech in Town Square, saying: “We must stop this organized oppression of the populace; only let us keep the mobsters enshrined in power.”
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Ah, the thought of being a supremacist. What type should I choose? Let’s try human. The reason I’m not a human supremacist is that it would be too hard to back up my stance. For then I must say: “Whatever you need done, humans will be the best men for the job.” – I’m not confident that my side will always win. If you need a plow pulled, oxen will be the best men for the job: even a single ox will pull a plow better than several humans. But let’s say that you need a computing device to run slow and glitchy; in that case, humans will indeed prove the best men for the job. Again, however, there are too many talents that other creatures possess which humans lack, so despite humankind’s advantage in the realm of botching mechanics, I would need to see improvements made to the product before I invest in human supremacy. What if I need a spider web built? A spider will be the better man for that job. What if I need a spider to sting my leg? Maybe a mosquito or horsefly will do; but I would still rather hire an actual spider than to settle for a human. Last example: You need to give birth to a baby whale in the depths of the ocean. A female whale is likely the best man for that job: she will beat any human at whale-birthing, especially if she is pregnant.
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There are so many acorns that fall from the oak trees on Main Street. If you could eat acorns, and you were my size (I am shaped like the average supermodel), then the leavings from one tree alone could sustain you for months. You could probably survive the winter on what dropped during the first week of September; you would only need to hide your stash from robbers, and then remember where you hid it. My problem is that I always forget; and then later I notice oak trees growing out of various suitcases and purses in the environment, and out of the glove boxes of automobiles, and out of the sandbox.
You have got to be careful, though. We watched a Korean movie last night which had English subtitles, and they used the word “rat” to denote what was clearly a mouse; also, they kept referring to their pet chipmunk as a “squirrel.” It was a regular family of humans who were speaking this way; although I doubt that the actors playing the parts were responsible for providing the translation of their own lines.
Just as if it were soy sauce, the family’s maid poured a bottle of poison over a plate of rice; then she left the dish on the floor, and the rodents came forth and ate it and died. Later, she slew the family’s son likewise, by poisoning his glass of milk; this maid also poisoned the father of the family and even herself, the same way that she killed the mice: with a deadly dinner. So there was a lot of poisoning going on in this film. At one point, the gentle mother of the family even attempted to poison the maid by stealing the bottle of poison from the maid’s room, and pouring its contents into some soup that the mother then served her; but the maid thwarted this treachery, and she did not die:
“Earlier I switched the contents of that bottle of poison that you ended up using, because I feared that you would steal it and try to poison me,” she said to the mother; “I replaced its poison with sugar. So, after tasting one spoonful of this soup that you served me, I knew that you had tried to poison me: For I tasted a spoonful of your husband’s soup before mine, and his was not sweet, but mine was sweet.”
The father of the family had a side-job as a piano teacher, and one of his students fell in love with him, but he rejected her advances; and this made her furious, so she threatened him, saying: “If you do not sleep with me, I will tear my clothes and say that you tried to rape me.” But the piano teacher was adamant in refusing her demand. So, this student tore her own blouse and her skirt. Then the teacher hit her so hard that the student almost tumbled down the stairwell. But then the teacher took a deep breath and murmured contritely: “Report for your piano lesson at the normal time, tomorrow. I need the money, because my wife and I are going to have a child.”
(In case you’re wondering, the piano teacher did indeed end up having a baby with his wife: it was a healthy boy. And then the maid tried to kill it.)
There were many other things that happened in that same Korean movie, but I don’t have time to explain them right now. The housemaid seduced the father, just like his piano student attempted to do unsuccessfully earlier, and the maid ended up pregnant; but, on the advice of the family’s gentle mother, the housemaid aborted her own child by diving down the stairs. But, like I just said: many other things happened, too numerous to relay at this time.
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What does God think of all these unkind deeds that we do to each other? Is God really standing behind the scenes of reality with his chorus of angels, watching everything and planning his Final Judgment? If he doesn’t desire us to poison each other all the time, with poisoned soup and poisoned rice and poisoned milk, then why does he create only one handsome husband but three desperate women: a wife, a housemaid, and a piano student? Why not create three kind men for three nice women: that way, nobody would get jealous, and it would eliminate the need for wicked mayhem.
But I suppose God knows best. He could probably answer in a way that would satisfy my outraged moral sense. I can imagine him saying: “I did indeed create a handsome man for the maid, but instead of meeting him in her science class and falling in love, as I intended, the housemaid skipped school to smoke cigarettes in the closet of the piano student. Had she not been hiding in there smoking her cigarette, she would never have met the piano student; and she, that student, would never have introduced the housemaid to the family of her piano teacher. Also, in the case of the student, if she would only have gone home to practice her lessons, as her teacher instructed her, then she would have met the fine gentleman that I created to be her soul mate, as he was walking on the footpath near her house, and the two would have fallen in love at first sight; but instead, the student decided to neglect the recommended practicing, and rather than head home, she climbed up and hid in a tree outside her teacher’s bedroom window, to spy on the married man while he slept. This is where all the problems begin: young girls do not stay in school or practice their musical instruments; they run wild and follow their own lusts, which lead them down the path to bitter destruction.”
This excuse from God convinces me. But still, as long as he is going to keep watching us, I wish that God would interfere with our reality more often: he should stop every attempted poisoning before it can take a life. He could also solve the false rape accusation by serving as a witness in the resultant legal proceeding. Even better, in cases of genuine assault, God could stand between the parties and obstruct the assailant, thus preventing what would have been a rape, instead of just watching the rape with his angels and then performing the miracle of conception within the womb of the victim.
Would God have a persuasive argument for his refusal to prevent such heinous crimes? I don’t think so. It is these scenarios that move me to say: This type of God does not exist; there is no watcher taking notes on us and planning an ultimate verdict. That urgent impulse to help a fellow creature-in-need, which we feel when we chance upon a disaster: that is what can be called “God.” It is a limited God, neither all-knowing nor all-powerful. In fact, it is a very weak God. But just as an atom alone is insignificantly small, yet when many atoms cooperate and harmonize they form every type of being, from the wisest to the strongest, we humans are like individual atoms on our own, but in organized groups our potential is limitless: we might end up forming the omniscient, omnipotent, everlasting God that we have always desired. That’s why a well-organized community of regular people is verboten to the Powers that Be; they prefer a humankind that is divided and isolated. Since they enjoy dominance under the present conditions, their interest is to keep reality frozen in its current state: a world overflowing with rape and murder.









