Sunday, August 2, 2009

One Thousand Billion - 13 Digits of Delusion

A recent blurb of numerical interest in Time Magazine's July 27th issue caught my eye in a "there's-something-really-disturbing-about-this-information-but-I-can't-quite-put-my-finger-on-it" way. Here's what it said:


“$1.09 trillion - The U.S. federal deficit, which reached 13 digits for the first time and could grow to nearly $2 trillion by fall.”


On the surface this is just an interesting figure - something to fill the bottom of a page, but after reflecting three questions occurred to me, and because of them I can't write this off as insignificant. Join me on my journey of complete confusion.

1) Wait...what?!

This unprecedented event in United States financial history blithely states a debt that looks like this:

$1,000,000,000,000

That’s one thousand, billion dollars.

It’s an unfathomable number, but the tone of the quote in Time Magazine doesn’t try to convey how massive that figure is. It doesn’t make a parallel to what that amount of money can buy, or how an equal amount is being spent today. Luckily, the good people over at Mint.com have come up with a few ways to visualize it that I thought I’d share to horrify you with this figure of debt that we are calmly accepting as trivial.



and my personal favorite:




2) Wait...when?!

This staggering number – enough money to spend a dollar a second for the next 32,000 years – is expected to double in the next four months.

Take your time with that.

The national debt, which reached this catastrophic number for the first time in our history (a number that equals all government spending of the last 200 years combined), is expected to double in four months. Double. I’ll say it again, but...differently. It took us over 200 years to reach this horrifying debt, and we anticipate doubling it in a few more months.

The expectation of our economy somehow coping with a $2,000,000,000,000 national debt is an insight into the boundless capacity to delude ourselves into calmly accepting and hoping to cope with horrendous facts about everything - from our bodies, our environment, our future on this planet, and ourselves. We are numb to "stats", and narcotize ourselves to potentially destructive behavior. The wealth of millions of people on this planet is reduced to a phrase that we can ignore – 13 digits. Insane.

3) Wait...where?!

This “story” is only one sentence long and it’s buried at the bottom-right hand corner of the page. It’s presented as a piece of trivia; a novelty to look at and go, “hmmm…that’s wacky.” However, after taking a short look at what that figure indicates, and it's projected growth - like we just did -one would hope that this would be front page, international, earth-shaking news. Instead it's a quirky number fact at the bottom of page 15. This story, not just the number, but its relegation as a fun fact terrifies me to my soul. I'm happy I didn't read a full page story - I might have imploded.

Humanity's ability to delude itself is boundless. It must be, because even after reading things like this everyday, I'm here trying to stimulate change. Maybe I'm just as deluded to think that this post wasn't for an audience of one.

Maybe.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Welcome to the Chicken Egg Situation

Here are three questions that lead to my exploration into humanity and civilization.

1) Where do we come from?


I used to ignore this question as irrelevant.

It's not.

2) Why do we live the way we do?

I assumed we lived "the way we do" because man naturally progresses to better ways of doing things. It's how we evolve.

But do we really? I'm not so sure anymore.

3) What does the future hold for me, and for mankind?

As a child and young adult I thought the future would be a utopia where mankind conquered the problems we face today - death, old age, hate, war, famine, weather, disease, space travel. These would be outdated 20th century problems defeated by "science."

I've waited for the inevitable solutions to these inconveniences. We're reaching the end of the first decade of the 21st century and they still define our civilization.

"Why?"

Where's my flying car? Where's the super tomato that cures cancer and grows in five seconds?



I'm still waiting for that "perfect chicken" and I'm worried about what happens when I get it.

(Don't worry I have a whole separate rant for that comic later).

We are not the adults we imagined as children. We are not the society that we prepared for in school. We are not the civilization that millions of years of evolution and human culture have worked and survived for.

We are something else.

I am at a logic block - a chicken, egg situation. If things are the way they are (and I'll be talking about exactly what that is) I'm forced to ask:

Which came first, the current state of humanity or our present day civilization?

Who created whom?

The answer to this and many more questions is in the way our society views itself. I'll be examining newspaper stories, current events, personal stories, interviews, internet phenomena, and even comics to find out what that is. In the words of Daniel Quinn, I'll transform myself into an "alien anthropologist" looking at humanity from the outside in.

I'm excited at what I'll find.

So here we go.

Welcome to the Chicken Egg Situation.