Humanity in Flux: Would a Species that Recognizes its Own
Worth Be Actively Destroying Itself?
By Kali Ma- Waking Times
It is common sense that what we value, we wish to take care
of, preserve, and treat with respect. Often times, this care is expressed
towards material objects such as cars, jewelry, and luxury items; or more
abstractly, towards traditions such as religious holidays or family and
cultural customs. But what is the value we assign to the life of a human being?
When we take a look at how we treat each other as people, it
is safe to say that we do not seem to value human beings very much. In a system
based on materialism and the pursuit of “success,” money and power have come to
define a human being’s value. Consequently, nothing has inherent worth – everything
is just a means to obtaining a desired end and satisfying our seemingly
obsessive need for recognition and power. In the pursuit of these goals, the
environment is being destroyed with a fanatical vigor one expects of an
adolescent consciousness whose shortsighted impulse for instant gratification
leaves it dangerously indifferent to the consequences of its actions; at the
same time, countless human lives are sacrificed in wars over resources while
financial tyranny waged against the working class in the form of austerity is
plunging millions of people into poverty across the globe. Nothing is off
limits in corporate capitalism’s suicidal quest for profits. But, when
everything has a price, nothing has inherent value.
One of the most important and sacred processes any human
being undergoes is the development of his or her own personhood. It is the
highly personal choice of who we wish to be in the world and how we wish to
express our own individuality and uniqueness as part of the human community.
Central to this development of the Self is education. But instead of serving as
a building block for individual and collective development, education today is
merely a means for getting a “good job” and “moving up” in the world. It has no
intrinsic value: the joy and curiosity that accompany learning and discovery
about ourselves and the world have been completely commodified and turned into
what Dr. Cornel West often refers to as “cheap schooling.” In this “cheap schooling,” the curricula is
defined by what is profitable in the “marketplace,” not what is valuable for
individual growth and humanity as a whole.
Social studies, the humanities, arts, and anything that presents an alternative to the sterile and lifeless corporate culture that has permeated all corners of our existence is degraded, ridiculed, and deemed unworthy by the “marketplace,” which only seeks to employ mindless, obedient drones who will do as they are told.
Social studies, the humanities, arts, and anything that presents an alternative to the sterile and lifeless corporate culture that has permeated all corners of our existence is degraded, ridiculed, and deemed unworthy by the “marketplace,” which only seeks to employ mindless, obedient drones who will do as they are told.
Critical thinking and a person’s unique perspective are
highly undesirable in a system of hierarchical ownership and top-down
management of resources and institutions. The right to cultivate our personhood
is sacrificed at the altar of corporate capitalism, which provides us with a
cheap substitute for individuality and self-expression through a false sense of
belonging, empty personal achievements far below our true potential, and, of
course, the formation of a “unique” crowd identity through fashionable consumer
products manufactured by wage slaves in foreign countries whose working
conditions regularly cause mass deaths and drive others to suicide. As a
result, the system effectively robs humanity of citizens whose genuine
development of individuality, identity, and a true sense of Self would result
in a more conscious society that values life, diversity of expression, and that
views each living being as an invaluable part of the whole.
But how can we expect people to appreciate anything for its
innate value when most of us do not even recognize the inherent worth of a
human being? We discriminate against one another because we deem others
unacceptable and, thus, not worthy enough of our respect; we kill and maim
other humans on mass scales through wars and conflicts in the name of profit,
all the while masked as heroic undertakings for “worthy” causes in “defense” of
one’s “superior” tribe; on a more social level, we assign worth and value to
human beings based on their socio-economic status and whether they are
“productive” members of society. This is why “failure” can be so devastating to
a person’s mental well-being and self-image: because our worth, value, and
sense of purpose are defined by external achievements which, if removed,
decimate our sense of self-worth and make us invisible casualties of corporate
capitalism’s disposable culture. What these few examples show us is that just
being a human is not enough. One has to do something or be a particular way in
order to be considered valuable or worthy. This mentality – the belief in the
inherent worthlessness of a human being – lies at the core of the hatred and
condemnation we direct towards one another. The message is clear: unless you
meet society’s standards of what it means to be “valuable,” you are worthless.
The owners of the system – the corporate oligarchs – have,
through mass propaganda and cultural conditioning over time, taught us that
worth is about how much money a person has, the type of job they hold, the
amount of property they own, and how “successful” they are (i.e. how well they
reflect the values of the dominant culture). In this type of society,
materialism and the trivial become our Gods to which we pledge allegiance in an
economy that constantly profits from our desperation to be accepted and seen as
worthy. The meaning of life is reduced to achieving “success” and recognition
while the deep-seated desires of one’s soul for truth and connection are
willfully sacrificed for superficial achievements whose promises of “happiness”
and “worth” never seem to materialize. In the end, life itself becomes
meaningless.
When money, recognition, and materialism determine a human’s
worth, only the few are seen as valuable. As Chris Hedges explains in“Let’s Get
This Class War Started,” the rest of us
are deemed worthless, “disposable human beings” in service of corporate
oligarchs who view the lower classes as “uncouth parasites, annoyances that
have to be endured, at times placated and always controlled in the quest to
amass more power and money.”
Our oligarchic rulers have successfully convinced us that
their values are ours – most of us seem to believe that humans are inherently
worthless and only serve as means to achieving one’s personal objectives. In
this kind of culture, everything and everyone – including friends and family –
become disposable commodities to be used, exploited, and worn out for
self-interest and shortsighted ego-desires. Unsurprisingly, in such a society,
friendship is a foreign concept and practiced in superficial settings and
contrived “meet ups” that mask an inner sense of isolation and loneliness, a
natural by-product of an egocentric culture. We are disconnected from one
another because we do not value anything for its essence – the inherent worth
of cooperation, friendship, and genuine togetherness is considered a bore and a
waste of time. There always seems to be some ulterior interest inherent in our
relationships that satisfies our fleeting appetite for company – rarely do
people get together out of a genuine desire to connect and honestly share
themselves with each other.
Our devaluation of people and life itself is simply a
reflection of our own personal, deep-seated sense of worthlessness as human
beings. It is what psychiatrist Carl Jung referred to as projection - the act
of prescribing one’s unconscious inner quality onto an object that lies outside
of oneself – which “change[s] the world into the replica of one’s own unknown
face. ”What we are reflecting on the outside is a belief that we are nothing
more than worthless biological creatures here to consume, amass, hoard, and
“succeed” (read: dominate) over those around us and for much of humanity, a
vile creation whose sole purpose is to repent and make up for its existence to
a wrathful, authoritarian God-figure. No wonder we have no respect for life and
each other.
The root of our sense of worthlessness (and the ruling
elite’s ability to convince us of it) is perhaps our separation from the
natural world and the cycle of life. Humans see themselves as standing above
nature as opposed to being a part of it. Because of our self-appointed
supremacy, we have isolated ourselves from the natural world and reign supreme
over all life showing little respect by constantly violating, trashing,
extracting, destroying, killing, and exploiting every aspect of the
environment. We have no reverence for nature and only turn to it to extract
more fuel to power our unsustainable lifestyle or to objectify its beauty when
it serves us. Rarely do we stand in awe and respect of the incredible complex
and intricate network of life that weaves together animals, plants, and
countless other life forms into a sophisticated and mysterious existence – an
existence that has been evolving for billions of years, while humanity’s short
presence on Earth is threatening to destabilize the ecosystem, which, in turn,
will undoubtedly lead to our demise.
The fatal mistake of humanity is its arrogance rooted in the
illogical and insanely narcissistic belief that humans are more powerful than
nature. A rational species would realize the obvious: that human beings are
dependent on nature for their survival. However, it is the pompous mindset of
supremacy that blinds one from recognizing the interrelationship between
oneself and the outside world, which eventually brings the dominators’
unconscious reign to a disastrous halt. It is precisely this separation from
nature and all life that has led to an identity crisis – a confusion about our
place in the world that compels us to seek meaning and worth through
domination, suppression, and conquest of the outside world and each other.
Undoubtedly, we are sowing the seeds of our own
annihilation. It is perhaps humanity’s unconscious desire to destroy the
worthless within, because what is devoid of value is insignificant,
meaningless, useless and it deserves no attention or love – and above all – it
does not deserve to exist.
In order to stop our unconscious march towards collective
suicide, we must undertake the painstaking process of self-discovery and
transform the personal belief structures that betray our own sense of
worthlessness. There is no higher power, no God, no Messiah that will magically
come down and save us from ourselves: it is up to each one of us to expand our
awareness and channel the higher ideals of cooperation, unity, justice, and
compassion here on Earth. We can only do so once we recognize our own inherent
worth and decide to act on our potential as unique creations of an
ever-evolving consciousness whose existence is worth saving. Viewed from this
perspective, “we are the ones we’ve been waiting for.” Will we heed the call?
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