The only question that matters

From inside a building that once housed a Catholic-run Indian cultural genocide school in NW Indiana

It’s probably time we clear the air of a few things.

First, if you only pay attention to the ridiculous political theater in the brazenly commercialized popular media, then you might not realize that we are deep into a planet-wide crisis of unprecedented magnitude and scope. It is not hyperbole to say that we are completely fucked. In fact, to say that we are completely fucked is a gross understatement.

Global warming isn’t just a series of news-worthy weather events or an excuse to buy an electric car. The largest mass extinction in 66 million years isn’t just a fun fact to share on social media. The irradiating of the oceans and atmosphere doesn’t just mean it’s probably time to upgrade those old rusty nuclear power plants. The industrial sterilization of land and the chemical toxification of rivers aren’t just the temporary price of progress. Overlapping zoonotic pandemics are not just a natural side effect of our biological vulnerability to disease.

These things are all part and parcel of the same mounting and overwhelming and unstoppable catastrophe, a catastrophe that is an unavoidable consequence of how we are being forced to live, a crisis that is synonymous with modern global industrial civilization. To deny this basic truth is the delusional equivalent of believing the Earth is flat and the global economy is under the control of a secret cabal of alien lizards. 

Second, despite self-promotional corporate hype and mollifying government propaganda, innovations in science and technology won’t save us from the intensifying crisis. Science and technology are the proximal source of the problem to begin with. Science and technology are directly responsible for climate change. Their collective results have been sending two hundred unique species into extinction each day. They are the reason the oceans and atmosphere are radioactive. The industrial processes they make possible are precisely the ones toxifying the rivers and sterilizing the land. There is no convincing evidence, historical or otherwise, that science and technology can do anything other than make things even worse than they are. And it is absurd to think that the cure is to just add more of the poison that is making us sick.   

Third, if you are seeking a cure, if you are looking for a solution that allows civilization to continue intact, prepare to be disappointed because you aren’t going to find one. The most uncomfortable truth of all is that there is no solution to the catastrophe of civilization. The thoughtforms lurking behind the search for solutions are the very ones responsible for the perpetuation and intensification of the crisis.

This leaves us with a single burning question, the only question that really matters: What do we do about it?

Author: Mark Seely

Mark Seely is an award-winning writer, social critic, professional educator, and cognitive psychologist. He is presently employed as full-time faculty in the psychology department at Edmonds College in Lynnwood, Washington. He was formerly Associate Professor and Chair of Psychology at Saint Joseph's College, Indiana, where for twenty years he taught statistics, a wide variety of psychology courses, and an interdisciplinary course on human biological and cultural evolution. Originally from Spokane, Dr. Seely now resides in Marysville.

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