Hope for a better world

I have some things that I want to talk about and I have no other platform to say it. Therefore I shall be spending this blog post on a topic that holds next to zero relevance to what you are probably here for. If you are here just for the cynical Gundam humour or the pretty cosplay pictures, then feel free to ignore this entry because you will not find anything missed. But if you found that my previous rants offer you something new and worthy, then please read on.
Hope for a better world
It is not often that one senses history being written. History is only such because it is the past, and often the greatest achievements made in humanity’s past were acknowledged only in their distant future. Perhaps the figures of our previous generations were simply larger in death than in life, and perhaps a degree of mysticism gets caught in the passing down of their stories, but somehow one gets the feeling that there are too few public leaders who can inspire and unite like those from before our time.
But today I felt something, a feeling which one only gets to experience a few times in his entire lifetime. I felt that I was watching history being made in a single moment. Though our collective mundane routines gradually build up over time to give birth to what will be one day called heritage, the awe-inspiring sensational of history being made can only come from great deeds and great people of colossal impact. I have only felt this once before in my lfe thus far, and that was the night* I stood in front of my television as I watched the live CNN broadcast of the second plane crashing into the World Trade Center. * I live in GMT+8
And today it was Barack Obama’s speech in Philadelphia.
Now before you groan, I acknowledge that the fact that because tech-savvy Americans are overwhelmingly Democrats and that political popularity on the internet tends to create a mindless legion of fans that turns off moderate/neutral parties with its incessant praise for the candidate (just take a look at the number of Obama articles showing up on the Digg front page), the pro-Obama message is getting somewhat old and diluted.
But I honestly believe that Barack Obama has done much to deserve it and I will try my best not to let this article degenerate into another groupthink exercise.
Of course, I am in no way suggesting that Obama’s speech will have as much historical impact on the world as the 9/11 attack. In fact, while I do believe that he has a very good chance of becoming the next president, I am under no delusion and I know very well that his speech will ultimately amount to nothing but a footnote in history if he fails to clinch the Democratic nomination and the presidency.
All I am saying is that his speech invoked within me a sense of hope for change, that perhaps this may just be deem as the starting point of a revolution in the history textbooks of generations down.
A deficit of empathy and a surplus of apathy
While the main theme of Obama’s speech from Tuesday dealt with racism in America and its pervasive influence on a society that does its best to pretend it doesn’t exist, the underlying message is one that can be found in his book The Audacity of Hope: It is a criticism against the senseless polarization of ideological groups and a lack of common ground between opposing world views.
Partly, the media and its corporate agendas are to be blamed for this. It is often simpler and more profitable for news network to filter issues down to their core slogans and define entire public personalities with a few lines of soundbite.
But the real reason why people are so susceptible to such over-simplifications is due to ignorance and apathy. Apathy is not fixable as far as I see it, for there will always be people who do not feel compelled to know beyond their immediate surroundings. On the other hand, I feel that ignorance is curable and the way to do it is to make information so easily obtainable and experiences so widely accessible that apathy will not be enough to keep a person ignorant.
This issue has been at the back of my mind for a while, and occasionally something comes along to remind me of it, the most recent example being Tibet.
Tibet
While most Westerners, after decades of Hollywood activism, are convinced that the Chinese government is an evil monolith and Tibetans are being repressed on a daily basis, most ordinary Chinese people are equally convinced that Tibet rightfully belongs to China and the central government is spending a huge amount of their tax money in bringing modernity and wealth to the remote region.
The language barrier prevents the two group of exchanging ideas meaningfully and you end up with two ideological groups who engage in massive groupthink within their own ranks. There is zero effort made to understand the other side, because the other side is simply “wrong” or “evil”.
The truth is somewhere in between. While Tibetan grievances with regards to the preservation of their culture should be addressed by the central government, pro-Tibet actvists should also reconsider their unquestioning support of the acts of violence being committed by the rioters in Lhasa.
I find it baffling how Western commentators refuse to acknowledge any wrongdoings on the Tibetan side while not missing a single chance to slam China. As pictures of destroyed shops owned by Han Chinese streamed out of Lhasa, I did not see a single English comment condemning these acts of violence against innocent civilians. Instead, the all the self-righteous indignation was being directed at China for sending in troops to suppress what was essentially anarchy with angry mobs.
The fact is that Free Tibet activists look like hypocrites when they ignore the elephant in the room and overlook any misdoings by the rioters. This prevents ordinary Chinese from paying any serious attention of their message. At the same time, ordinary Chinese do not seem to comprehend just how negatively their nation’s actions are being perceived by foreign spectators.
The same two-way bigotry and ignorance are corrupting Sino-Japanese relationship, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Serbian-Kosovar issue, the whaling confrontations between Australia and Japan, and even US politics.
Yes we can
The message Obama brings is one of change, but not many people understand just what kind of change he is talking about. Most politicians promise change in one form or another but ultimately fail to deliver, and because of that many feel that Obama’s campaign lacks substance. I disagree.
The change he talks about is very specific: he wants to create a less polarizing government. He recognizes the stupidity of how politicians rather stick to party lines than weigh the pros and cons when handling issues, and he has made reconciliation, both domestic and foreign, a core part of his message.
Can he really accomplish that even as president? That’s hard to say, but the fact is that he is one of the few politicians who has even identified it as a problem. There is a natural tendency for people who feel they are in the right to simply dismiss or even smother the opposition’s message, but ultimately that fails to address the real issue.
Cuba is a very extreme example of this, almost to the point of being comical. If US seriously intends to bring democratic change to the government, then lifting the sanctions would be the best way to do it. But the current president seems to treat this issue as a matter of personal pride, and refuses to “give in” as long as Cuba does not get down on its knees and beg for forgiveness.
The ideological differences that were the cause of this divide have long ceased to matter: Communism is beyond dead. The standoff today is nothing more than the result of chauvinistic pride. The fact that Obama has said that he is willing to engage in unconditional dialogues with Cuba is a huge plus in my book.
A better world tomorrow
Now while I am unmistakably pro-Obama (and which non-American isn’t?), and this post was indeed sparked off by the speech he made, the purpose of my post is not to convince you to vote for him (if you are American).
I strongly believe that the next generation of people will be more and more like Obama, as technology overrides geographical divides and people grow to be more accepting of differences. The WW2 and Cold War generations may be stucked in perceiving the world through a “them vs. us” mentality, but perhaps one day that will not have to be the case.
Empathy is derived through shared experiences. Since the dawn of time, this has always referred to geographical location, race, religion, culture and language. It is difficult to empathize with the unknown, and it is all to easy to fear and hate it. At the time of WW2, coming into regular contact with foreigners was a rarity and most people saw the world beyond their own as whatever their government propaganda had depicted it as.
This is still very much true in many parts of the world today, but at least it’s improving. Internet has made it possible for the ordinary person to at least have some idea as to what the other side feels. If virtual reality were to reach the level seen in Matrix someday, then perhaps we will finally be able to empathize with a person on the other side of the globe just as we empathize for the friends physically next to us.
Primitive tribes consolidated into towns, cities and ultimately nations because improvements in technology and bureaucracy allowed people to empathize and understand each other over a greater geographical area. As such, I see nationalism as an issue that has to be resolved through technology.
Then again, maybe I am being too optimistic about technology as usual because I love it so much. Perhaps a mature global information network will not result in more world-savvy individuals like Obama, but rather polarize people in different ways than before. Still, at the very least, I don’t see anti-Apple radicals bombing Cupertino.
Either way, I think we can all do with a lot less ignorance and a bit more empathy. It makes me cringe when people dismiss entire nations or races due to an uninformed self-righteous opinion, but at the same time I wish people paid more attentions to the social background and disenfranchisement that produce such distorted world views in the first place.
P.S. I just watched Evangelion 1.0… It’s the same show as before! What a money-milker. >_<



March 21st, 2008 at 5:31 pm
As with most of your rants, i think i can fully agree with this one.
However I do think you are a bit optimistic about the technology part.
I do not doubt that technology will progress and maybe reach a point where we can interact (close to physical) with everyone on the world, but when i watch people around me (people my age), i think many will not care. There are many people not open for new technology.
For example, i’m the only on in my year in school (60 people) who even bothers to speak english on the net to talk to people from everywhere. I don’t care where people come from as long as i like tealking with them / reading their stuff (this site is an example for that), but many many other don’t want that. Sometimes just because they don’t want to speak english out of silly reasons like english being a school subject. (They don’t wanna learn in their free time).
And i think in my case here in germany it’s clearly not out of teh fact that we couldn’t afford the necessary technology. (Which does pose a very bit problem in my opinion)
Well, i hope that changes :O
March 21st, 2008 at 5:50 pm
I dunno… I’ve given up on the human race so I have a glum view on the world in general. Basically most people are so ignorant, as you say, about others and only think about the views of what’s near them.
Fact is that even if Obama gets elected, America will always be hated by anti-Americans because of what it is.
March 21st, 2008 at 5:57 pm
@ IKnight: At least you are rid of Tony Blair and are long since rid of that thing we refer to as…..”Margaret Thatcher” *shudders*. Her entire idealogy seemed to be built around showing that she was tough and in control, but to the point of utter ridiculousness In my opinion she was the closest thing the U.K would ever see to facism. Though it wasn’t quite to the degree George Orwell described in 1984 I’m sure more than a few scholars were sharing discussions about whether or not Orwell had meant Big Mother instead.
March 21st, 2008 at 6:21 pm
I hope, I hope so much, that things will change for the better. However, I don’t think it will happen in my lifetime, at least not in Germany.
In my year of school, a lot of people hate jews. I’m not joking right here. They hate them. Clever, nice people, a lot of my friends even, people I wouldn’t call ignorant - they are, though. Basically the same goes for gay people. The Internet certainly does not solve that problem.
Politics in Germany have been stagnating (Does that exist in English?) for a long time, at least in my opinion (though I can’t really tell, because I’m obviously not that old), so people don’t care about it anymore.
I hope so much that things will change, that they change when Obama is president, but he needs a will stronger that iron to do that. Seriously, I would love to shout YES WE CAN - I simply don’t believe in it.
March 21st, 2008 at 7:22 pm
You really don’t know how heartening it is to see someone write this sort of stuff these days. In a world where information overload has meant that issues are almost always polarized and the facts tend to get lost in the bloodthirsty screams of demagogues everywhere (I live in Sydney… just try listening to Radio 2GB in the mornings… its madness), its good to see that reason hasn’t been lost yet!
March 21st, 2008 at 8:15 pm
I have real-life friends in Germany. And yep, they hate the politics there so much because “it doesn’t make any sense at all”.
From what I have seen from the previous posts is that somehow we “otaku” are somehow having the same thought, we are able to understand that peace is workable and achievable, but we simply don’t believe in it because of general pragmatism and lack of trust in our homo sapien counterparts. The idea of “we are powerless to do anything” has taken quite a deep hold in our minds that the ideas we all come up with are indefinitely stifled and often referred to as “incessant LUNA+IC fantasies”.
You are not exactly a pessimist Darky, you are just a low optimist as I can see. But both of us live in a place where the students put academic achievement above anything else, and technology mastery is still what a few people can hold as an ability, most of the younger generation are nothing more than script kiddies (I am one myself, so much for hypocrisy) who CCS every line and code from other people’s websites. In my class I only know the another person who can talk in techspeak without getting confused, and the rest can openly declare themselves as computer idiots and be totally proud of it. With such people around, how can we utilise technology to make our societies more mature?
Maybe Darky will become Aeolia Schenburg in the future (quote : I still have faith in humankind). xD Anyone wants be a parent of Alejandro Corner?
March 21st, 2008 at 8:32 pm
I understand your thinking on these issues, it was precisely in my search for a better world, my belief that there HAS to be a way in changing this world, that led me to political science.
Unfortunately, political science doesn’t provide the answers. That dim ray of light I saw happened to be in philosophy instead. Perhaps there might be answers/hints in political theory. I wouldn’t know, I’m still a first year student.
Then again, after 1 semester of studying, I’m inclined towards what IKnight has said. I fear that the chasm between idealism and realism might never be bridged.
Good luck to Obama, if he wins.
March 21st, 2008 at 9:10 pm
I really appreciate this piece. I’m also an Obama supporter (I was able to attend one of his rallies before Super Tuesday and he was an absolutely amazing speaker). This election will be the first I’ll be able to vote in, so I’m hoping for Obama’s presence on the ticket. In any case, my classmates and I are keeping eyes wide open on the current political situations in the world, not just on the election, but on many other countries we don’t usually consider, such as Angola. I truly hope whatever president comes into office will understand the significance of their actions and be able to improve not only situations at home, but improve the state of our current foreign policy.
March 21st, 2008 at 9:36 pm
The wonders of technology in creating harmony: Blu-ray vs HD DVD, PS3 vs Wii vs Xbox 360, Apple vs MS, etc etc. As in, PS3 fans not seeing the flaws of their favoured product and not seeing the strengths of other consoles etc etc. You get the point.
Even with technology, people are single-minded. We need to become GUNDAMS to stop war.
March 21st, 2008 at 10:30 pm
tj han
Actually it is a good thing. The creation of smaller niche groups through online participation will eventually serve to dilute the strength of racial, religious and national identities. People can hold flame wars over video game consoles, but the topic in contention cannot be easily abused and distorted for the purpose of physical violence. Of course anonymous hacking groups may become more problematic…
I’m not saying that technology will remove dissent, disagreement and hatred, I’m saying that in the long run it will reduce the susceptibility of people to be easily polarized along national, racial and religious lines.
Labbes
As to whether Obama has the ability to bring about change, I am personally not too concerned with that. Few presidents manage to achieve much during their terms and the country is still in one piece. But I can definitely say that Obama’s election will help to improve American’s foreign affairs and go a long way in making up for the anti-immigrant anti-foreigner image of America that has built up over the past few years.
March 21st, 2008 at 11:17 pm
Obama’s true message fell largely on deaf ears in this part of the world. The problem is the unflinching stubbornness of the right wing in American politics…no matter what the other side is saying (good or bad)..its always ignored or lambasted. The only people who actually watched the speech and took away a positive message from it were people who supported Obama regardless. The lack of understanding and empathy (as you rightly point out) is truly troubling and in case people are in any doubt is the only reason why Republicans continue to have so much fanatical support.
March 22nd, 2008 at 12:21 am
Did someone just ask for change?
http://www.theonion.com/content/news/black_guy_asks_nation_for_change
Yeah. The people in the article are pretty much the typical American.
March 22nd, 2008 at 12:31 am
And this is why I continue to respect you more than just a blogger, DM.
While I am just a casual observer, I also do hope Obama does win the U.S Presidential Elections. In fact, I see the recent results of the Malaysian General Elections, where our long oppressed Opposition parties actually turned the tide against the National Front, by promising a message of change, reaching out to the masses via the Internet, as a premonition for his win.
This are truly interesting times we are living in, and definitely, we will see much change in this year onwards.
March 22nd, 2008 at 12:33 am
@DM
Yeah, I definitely think that will be the case. America’s “image” it has internationally will change as much as it has to.
March 22nd, 2008 at 12:44 am
@TJ-Han: Aren’t Gundams technology that make their pilots single minded too?
But let us not forget the epic campaigns of Slice of Life vs. Mecha, Kanon vs. Clannad, Kyoani vs. Every other anime ever made, Anime vs. Manga and Gundam Seed vs. Gundam 00. Yes the anime community is full of it’s own individuals who are set in their ways on what is good and what is bad and what is worth our time to pay attention and what isn’t. Sorry ryuko_hikaru but we Otaku as whole are probably some of the most biased and opinionated people around. I think it’s just a select few of us who have the mindset of branching out and entertaining new ideas. :(
@Ron: You can bet that Fox News, Rush Limbaugh and the Wall Street Journal are going to be spinning that speech so bad, looking for loopholes to bash away at it and make it look like a terrible speech for their target audience. Kind of like….I don’t know how a section of the blogging community views Gundam 00’s narrative (okay mostly Jason actually). Sorry to use a classic example, but it just fits so well.
Yeah it’s strange, I never thought I’d be on a similar wavelength with DarkMirage. I’ll probably just have to ignore the Gundam articles and then we’ll see eye to eye from now on.
March 22nd, 2008 at 12:50 am
Living in America, I’m finding it hard not to be cynical about all the politicians and their stances. Even though I consider myself conservative in my views, someone like McCain doesn’t excite me in quite the same way as Obama, particularly when he is speaking. Though I disagree with some of his policy platforms, he’s far more agreeable than Hilary and his message is one that inspires me. I want to hope for a better future, and he makes me feel like I’m not crazy for doing so.
Bush has shown that, despite his original campaign slogan, he is a divider and not a uniter. Maybe it’s my youth, but I’ve never seen politics so divisive in my entire life. It’s not just the war either; every little thing that Bush does divides this nation further. But Obama seems to be capable of what Bush isn’t: to unite this nation beyond partisan politics and restore America’s status in the World stage.
The United States stands at a crossroads: do we continue along the path our current president has set, or do we strive for something greater than the status quo? I don’t believe McCain or Clinton has the ability to do anything but the former, and maybe Obama doesn’t either; but at least he’s trying.
March 22nd, 2008 at 12:53 am
@Kaioshin
Same wavelength? I’d doubt that you two even have similar frequencies. You do have a higher amplitude though.
March 22nd, 2008 at 1:27 am
I’m very surprised nobody talked about the reconciliation efforts in Rwanda as a model for DM’s theme of hope and, reconciliation.
There’s not much I can really give my 2 cents’ worth here, except that you missed out one point: it takes generations to clear out the “defeatism” attitude of the previous generation, which is difficult, but not impossible.
Speaking from the group with the most attention right now, I think the radical strain in our community is gripping on a stranglehold with us. The legitimate grounds that we are grousing at, can be easily hijacked by radicals and twist it to nefarious ideas. “CIA conspiracy,” “Israelite dominion” and what not. It still pervades in our community because there exists the so-called “Hitlerite mentality” that “our race is inherently better than yours because ours is the true religion.”
(Which probably describes well your atheist beliefs, DM. I respect that, but my defense is that a religion should not be solely based on people’s actions alone. I find it too cumbersome to engage in a diatribe with anyone here on the topic of religion, considering like in martial arts, nobody can be claimed to be “the perfect one” even with years of training, or in a religious context, theological research and prayer/meditation.)
Indeed, Barack Obama might have been right in assessment that the country is in dire need of change. The change for unity in the United States. The power of special interests lobbying, however, is very influential.
Whether the recent Malaysian elections is a sign of change for unity remains to be seen.
March 22nd, 2008 at 2:59 am
In order to have a better world, every individuals in the world will have to change. Not one, not two, but every.
To do so, information has to be flowed in and out regularly. With these information, people will be able to decide what’s right, what’s wrong. Only then, will there be change.
And speaking of information, some people may question the reliability of them. It’s again, up to individuals. Tabloids and news agency, in my personal belief, are reporting half facts. The other half, comes from knowledge i guess…
March 22nd, 2008 at 4:55 am
I applaud. Really, I love America, especially it’s basis and beginnings, but we have serious problems. The Internet has helped some, but truthfully, 2/3 of American’s are deft, dumb, and blind when it comes to anything they don’t believe for themselves; pure ignorance. I have a feeling this stems from a population whose majority are absolutists.
I personally know people who think G.W.Bush is an all-star president, I receive hate messages about Obama forwarded from friends and family, and it all stems from the fact that these people believe in one, and only one thing, that which they believe. I’ve spoken and debated on the premise of science, religion, spirituality, etc with people and even with proof of matters they cannot alter their views, rather they never listened or considered. I fear that most Americans will fall back on “I don’t know about those things”, disregard anything above their knowledge, and will refuse to “find it by their own hands.” (no these aren’t all dealing with the same people, but they are not the tuned-in to technology crowd)
So America is crazy. Apparently 100 year of changes (reform, civil rights, women’s rights, and more) haven’t brought us better understanding. I will vote for Obama, in hope that another change may be the one.