Home » More Kipling: history repeats itself (“the burnt Fool’s bandaged finger”)

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More Kipling: history repeats itself (“the burnt Fool’s bandaged finger”) — 11 Comments

  1. Orwell was talking about today’s Hollywood. People who say environment and conservation matters, and they’re driving around in SUV Convoys and Lear Jets. People who talk about taxing the rich instead of the poor, when they put all of their money into no taxable trust funds like Noam Chomsky. People who talk about being part of the proletariat when they come from a rich neighborhood, Michael Moore. People who repeat endlessly about affirmative action, but only hires like 5% black people in their staff for their movies, like Moore.

    These are the people who advocate to solve social problems, but in reality they do not want those problems to be solved. Because if ever those problems were solved, they would have nothing to sooth their conscience. When all of life’s problems are gone, they are only left with their own problems to solve, and that is intolerable to the rich and the powerful. No amount of money nor power can solve a person’s guilty conscience.

    Kipling’s understanding of false slogan bearers, human nature, and human fallibilities makes him akin to Orwell. No man who did not understand human nature or how to manipulate it, could have written 1984 as Orwell did. What you can understand, you can also destroy and manipulate. Or, construct and support.

  2. No, Orwell was right. Foolish and seemingly trivial ideological actions can have horrific consequences. Demagogues rally mobs of young people because the brains of the young have not matured–their brains do not work properly in terms of judgement and perspective. They cannot anticipate future consequences of their actions today.

    Due to the current brevity of their lives and lack of experience, the young have not seen the monstrous results of the similar rallying of previous generations of young.

  3. Well, hypocrisy is to some extent the human condition, though one can choose to be more of less hypocritical.

    I think this is just a case of Orwell falling for the classic leftist fallacy that “all property is theft”, i.e. economic illiteracy, obliviousness to the possibilty of positive-sum interaction. Tragic.

  4. Thanks for this. Both for introducing me to old words new to me, and for your synthesis of them. For Kipling, the father and the writer, World War I was a personal, as well as a civilizational, tragedy.

  5. Yes, while Orwell was sadly unappreciated in his time, he is today grossly misunderstood and mangled. Witness the many self-serving abuses of “Orwellian.” But I suggest his essay “The Lion and the Unicorn”, a far more explicit indictment of leftism and pacifism and the covert hatred its true believers hold for the west.

    I enjoy your civil and literate contributions to the world.

  6. Another very good Kipling piece is his “Epitaphs of the War,” written after WWI. Samples:

    A DEAD STATESMAN

    I could not dig: I dared not rob:
    Therefore I lied to please the mob.
    Now all my lies are proved untrue
    And I must face the men I slew.
    What tale shall serve me here among
    Mine angry and defrauded young?

    COMMON FORM

    If any question why we died,
    Tell them, because our fathers lied.

    BATTERIES OUT OF AMMUNITION

    If any mourn us in the workshop, say
    We died because the shift kept holiday.

    HINDU SEPOY IN FRANCE

    This man in his own country prayed we know not to what Powers.
    We pray Them to reward him for his bravery in ours.

  7. At 1:50 PM, April 07, 2006, Frank Martin said…

    You are so damn good sometimes,
    ————————————-
    Funny, I was thinking the same thing. And so is Kipling, much of the time.

  8. I think what Orwell meant was that you have to be willing to pay the costs of humanitarianism, otherwise you are a hypocrite. Meaning, the personal costs of freeing economic helots or Muslims or etc. Whether that be higher prices, more wars, or more terrorism. If the humanitarians are protected by others from the consequences, then they cannot shed their hypocritical actions even if they wanted to. Other than say, going into foreign countries and living there, free from the strife of their homeland and capitalism.

    I think Orwell believed intervention is good, if you really intended to help. But if you really intended to help, then you have to suffer the consequences of freeing a nation or giving them free trade. In his world, the American version of international interventionism, an honest attempt at creating freedom and economic prosperity, was non-existent. Only socialist practices like Venezuella existed, or Imperialist practices of economic taxation.

    And that after this is accomplished, and the brave new world begins
    When all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins,
    As surely as Water will wet us, as surely as Fire will bum,
    The Gods of the Copybook Headings with terror and slaughter return.

    Wow, I didn’t know that Kipling read Fukie’s the End of History. How old is Fukie anyway?

    The “Gods” seem to mean the Slogan Banners. Those who hold to an essential truth. Like… PETA, ELF, ANSWER, CAIR, Code Pink, Socialists, Fascists, Communists, etc. Iraq the Model mentioned the Empty Slogan Banners that were the basis of the Baath party after the British evacuated the area. Empty Slogans have killed more people than any nuke ever has. Lots o slaughter.

    Do as I say, not as I do. For I am God, and the exisgencies of human sin does not mire me in the least. Hollywood loves to do that with their SUVs and talk about Blood for oil.

    I don’t tend to think that people forget the lessons of history, rather the lessons of history are intentionally covered up by various parties for even more diverse reasons. It might have been argued before the printing press, that people were just ignint, but the excuse of ignorancy isn’t available in the here and now. The problem is not lack of knowledge, the problem is that the knowledge is covered up by junk, by lies, and by effected distortions. It is hard for the average American to find the truth, but it is much easier than it was in the past. The Story of Iraq is available, but data can be destroyed by more data, simply by overloading the human brain. Before, the tyrants of history used the lack of sensory information to dominate, now they use the over abundance of sensory information to dominate. Communication is so fast and so expansive, that telling the whole story takes too much effort. Creating the truth is much harder than destroying it.

    It isn’t even that they are doing this with conscious malice. Hollywood for example, to alleviate their gift of being rich compared to the poor smucks in the rest of America, talks about blaming Bush and America. They talk about taxing the rich, but they do everything in their power to evade taxes. This self-deception, not only deceives them, but because they have money and power, deceives everyone they touch as well.

    The Gods of the Copy book will return indeed. Perhaps the guilt ridden conscience of socialism truly did begin in the elitist and socialist polities of Europe, given fire by guilt ridden individuals, who have spawned a pantheon of Gods and beliefs for the rest of us to deal with in the future.

  9. You are so damn good sometimes, its just scary!

    I bask in your reflected glory. This is one outstanding piece.

  10. Orwell believed that trading with people poorer than one’s self was “exploiting” them – and this did not just mean trading with people in other countries.

    For example employing people was “exploiting” them.

    People say to themselves “Orwell was a socialist, yes I know that” but then they forget about it. They should not forget about it – because his socialism undermines his thought.

    No matter how nice a man he was he never really had an alternative to the Stalinism he opposed. Any more than his character Winston Smith had an alternative to the system O’Brien represented.

    It really is the case that a knowledge of the basic principles of economics is needed if one is not going to fall into gross errors in political writiing.

    Either the errors of socialism – or of the populist right (Patrick Buchanan and others of his sort).

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