At the expense of once again showing an
arrogant snobbery that has turned the stomach of many, I recently
learned something I found rather interesting. It's a small fact, but
given the state of the nation and the world in general it has a large
bearing on the affairs of how things are run and the future of our
children. Though as usual, before I get to my damn, possibly over
inflated point I must do my usual grotesque digression into a
seemingly unrelated subject.
True historical documentaries on
television are a rare occurrence, curiously enough they are almost
extinct on such cable venues like the History Channel and Discovery
Channel where strange and inbred reality shows now dominate. Which on
the surface is quite the bizarre situation since when both of those
cable channels were chartered it was proudly proclaimed that their
purpose was to raise the standards of American television. Over the
years those networks have devolved into being dominated by puffball
shows about “antique picking”, the logging business, driving on
ice roads, and numerous programs about cars. While there is nothing
wrong with any of those series, the fact that they air on channels
meant to give something more than mindless entertainment proves that
quantity programming cannot really exist when corporate management
has to worry about ratings and nervous sponsors ready to bolt the second a show has a dip in viewership. On the rare times
anything educational is broadcast by those cable networks, whatever
subject they broach is only given the most superficial of treatment
before breaking for a long string of commercials.
The best example I can give is Neil
deGrasse Tyson's recent version of the Cosmos series first
started by Carl Sagan back in the 1980's. While the Fox Network is a
broadcast channel, not cable, the true length of each episode was
barely over forty minutes. Sure, they were an excellent forty minutes
compared the usual Fox-based crap, but overall Tyson, and producer
Seth MacFarlane, could have done a far better series had it aired on
PBC, as the original did years ago.
All that being said, the internet
streaming providers, such as Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu have a
number of historical documentaries that allow a snobbish prick like
me to sit back and watch television without feeling the IQ points
slip away like wisps of vapor rising up in the hot morning sun. Don't
get me wrong, the internet streaming providers have their own
collection of mindless crap but they all have things organized so
someone with a better than average curiosity that stretches into
shows with an intellectual weight can easily find them.
Such a documentary is: Athens:Democracy Without Rules airing on Amazon Prime and starring Dr.Bettany Hughes, British historian and author. Let me go ahead and get
the stereotypical sexist American disclaimer out of the way. Yes, Dr.
Hughes is an attractive woman but her ability to relate history in a
context someone like me can understand and connect to our modern
world is unparalleled. Her documentaries allow the watcher to relate
to the past in a manner that is sorely lacking in many historians who
can't get past the basic facts. Just to show what I think of Dr,
Hughes, I cannot help but call her the Carl Sagan of history, which
for me is high praise bordering on worship. Then again, I love
history while for far too many of the great unwashed and barely
sentient, they hardly comprehend things that happened just a couple
of decades ago.
In short, as anyone should be able to
guess, Athens: Democracy Without Rules tells the story of the rise of
democratic ancient Athens starting with how the wealthy aristocrats
controlled both the land and the city government with the poor living
nearly enslaved to them. It quickly moves on to the Age of Tyrants
and then the rise of Cleisthenes, who brought on the reforms which
came to be called democracy.
This documentary is not the typical
whitewash of history where some less than thorough and honest host
grossly waxes on about how Athens lead the way to the establishment
of Western Civilization. Yes, Athens did lay the foundations of the
West and, in my opinion was the most important defender of those
early ideals during the Persian Wars. Sorry fans of Sparta, sure
Leonidas and his troops held off the Persians at Thermopylae but it
was the Athenian naval battle at Salamis that saved Greek
civilization. The ancient Athenian people were total hypocrites but
quite frankly the citizens of Sparta were monsters given their
practices and government.
But Dr. Hughes goes on to show that the
people of Athens were not saints, that they regularly voted for
war--so much it came damn close to utterly destroying them, that they
oppressed woman in way quite similar to many Muslim countries, and
that while they championed the idea of freedom, their economy was
based on a vast population of slaves.
But it was the origin of the word
“idiot” that about made he fall over laughing. In today's modern
American English the word idiot is defined as anyone who is stupid
but in ancient Athens it held a meaning that, as far as I am
concerned best describes the proles that unfortunately dominate our
society.
Idiot is derived from the ancient Greek
word, ἰδιώτης ( idiōtēs ),
meaning “person lacking processional skill.” For those living during the years of ancient
Athenian democracy an idiot was someone characterized as a self-centered
person more concerned with private affairs than the greater public
good. It also meant someone lacking education and to be so mentally
deficient as to be incapable or ordinary reasoning. To the ancient
Athenians everyone when they were born were idiots but were made
citizens through education. Yes, don't send me hate mail or nasty
comments, I know Athenian citizenship was overwhelmingly hereditary
but for the most part they still imposed strict educational
standards.
Call
me a snob and slightly delusional but I can't throw a rock
anywhere I live without hitting someone who while trained to do one
thing well enough to have a job do not have the slightest ability to
make a reasonable and informed decision. If I desired to start a blog
listing examples on general idiocy it would be so easy but also
exponentially depressing. But before anyone starts calling me a
political partisan out to grind an ideological ax at the expense of
conservatives, rest assured idiotic behavior crosses the entire
political spectrum.
So,
some might be wondering what is wrong with being an idiot? It's
abundantly easy with most of society geared to service such people.
Yeah, but the world we live in now has reached a crowded complexity
that defies all the moaning down through the ages about how the
unwashed masses don't know their asses from a hole in the ground.
Humans are no longer a thinly scattered animals living in primitive
cities and villages completely disconnected from what goes on the
other side of the planet. Decisions made in Washington DC, Brussels,
Moscow, Beijing, New Delhi, and hundreds of others cities that would
terrify the ancient Athenian because of their size daily affect
everyone on the planet.
For
the average factory worker to not have a basic understanding of how
such things as regional trade agreements will affect them is to court
disaster and possibly suicidal. I could write a whole other crappy essay on how abuse of
the environment and the increased rate of extinction could endanger
the entire human species. But for far too many people, such
information is not just above their heads but something they do not
want to accept because it might mean an end to their easy lifestyle.
The same goes for police brutality here in the United States and how
an Africa-American male wouldn't be wrong to walk around with a shirt
displaying a circular target. Just to share the wealth of idiocy, the
same could be said for many nations, including American, European,
and Islamic, and how they are doing their best to turn a blind eye to
the plight of millions of refuges fleeing oppression, war, and
climate collapse.
A
comfortable idiocy seems to be a prerequisite for modern life in the
twenty-first century Western world. Mildly stupid entertainment, such
as the stuff I mentioned earlier, allows people to unwind and relax
after a hard day running the metaphorical but pointless hamster
wheel. Human nature seems to me that once a group has craved out
their comfortable little space that the rest of the world doesn't
exist. This complacency is highly dangerous because a lazy
population is easily distracted allowing the rise of a privileged
elite that will eventually do everything within their power to
protect their positions. Which was of course was the reason the
Athenian people rose up in the first place to begin their
unprecedented experiment in self government.
Given
the house of cards our civilization has become maybe were due for a
type of Dark Age. Maybe at some point people will realize that they
need to pay attention to the world around them, that idly making due
as their portion of the pie gets smaller and that some people get
nothing is wrong and rise up again. Then again, maybe if they stopped
being idiots they could have avoided all the heartbreak and spilling
of blood required to build a better world in the first place.
4 comments:
With today's television programming, I do fear that anti-intellectualism is on the rise.
I like coming here...we either get a cool story or a history lesson! I'll have to look for that show - as you know, I have Amazon Prime (Can you say "Catastrophe?" :-) )
...feeling the IQ points slip away like wisps of vapor rising up in the hot morning sun... <-- I know this wasn't a funny post, but this made me laugh out loud!
History Channel is great. I mean, I'm assuming that stuff about ancient aliens is accurate and verifiable.
Nobody uses the word idiot as well as the French. You really feel insulted when you're called an idiot in French.
I'm always concerned about the ability of the people, the idiot masses, to vote to make decisions about topics beyond their grasp. The recent transgender issues and the global warming stuff are two examples, or, hell, even certain policies about teaching evolution.
On the other hand, I'm really happy, so that might mean I'm an idiot, too.
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