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Posts tagged with "the end of the world"

Please listen

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Severn Suzuki made that speech in 1992. She was 12 years old. She ended her speech with these words:

At school, even in kindergarten, you teach us how to behave in the world. You teach us not to fight with others, to work things out, to respect others, to clean up our mess, not to hurt other creatures, to share, not be greedy. Then why do you go out and do the things you tell us not to do? Do not forget why you are attending these conferences, who you're doing this for. We are your own children. You are deciding what kind of a world we are growing up in. Parents should be able to comfort their children by saying, "Everything's going to be all right. It's not the end of the world, and we're doing the best we can." But I don't think you can say that to us anymore. Are we even on your list of priorities? My dad always says, "You are what you do, not what you say." Well, what you do makes me cry at night. You grown-ups say you love us, but I challenge you, please, make your actions reflect your words. Thank you.



That was in 1992, some sixteen years ago. Is anybody listening?

The pilot has already abandoned ship

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I was talking to someone about this very thing just the other day. I expressed surprise that she had even been able to get through to Yahoo on the telephone (because apparently she had). It had taken about an hour of being put on hold, if I remember correctly what I was told.

I've long found it unbelievable how bad the service is in most online businesses. Well, when I say 'bad', what I mean is 'non-existent'. I've never understood how that's acceptable (zero customer service). It gives me a feeling like my lungs have just collapsed. How is it possible even to breathe with no one to complain to?

With Hotmail, for instance, and many other companies, they don't even give a phone number for you to contact them. There is actually no possible means of you connecting with some human element of their organisation. I have a theory as to why this is, and it's quite simple - no human element actually exists. All that exists in their offices - if there are even offices - now are recorded messages, skeletons and cobwebs, and perhaps a slavering fat man (no longer exactly human) in one corner, rubbing his naked, hairy belly with a paw that is red and greasy from the human remains he has so diligently - and lip-smackingly - been disposing of.

The pilot has already abandoned ship. Same goes for our governments. They're all just recorded, holographic messages, cardboard cut-outs at windows and so on, while we're left here on a doomed planet, and somewhere, in another cobwebbed, empty office, a time-bomb is ticking.

Shogyou mujou

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An earthquake in Britain. Although I hate to be alarmist, and hate even more to state the obvious, it is actually the end of the world. And yet, even as masonry falls about their heads publishers find themselves too timid to publish anything even remotely interesting, for fear it will shock the brains of the simpering, moronic readers they imagine to be their only hope of survival in this world, and upon whom they desperately wish to fawn.

WHY? WHY? WHY? WHY? WHY? WHY? WHY? WHY? WHY?

WHY?

Come on. We're all dying anyway, you might as well do what you know very well you should do and publish me.



I'm just typing up my current novel Susuki. I have come, in my typing, to my translation of the beginning of Kamo no Chomei's Hojoki:

The flow of the river moves forever onwards, and the ever-changing water is not that which flowed here at the start. Bubbles that float in the backwaters now burst, now appear and burst again, and never have been known to stay for long. The people of this world and their habitations may also be likened unto this.



Susuki is chock-full of good stuff like this. I only hope I can pull off the ending and the embedded texts. But perhaps I've given away too much already, and it will probably be about fifty billion years till it gets published, anyway, when some publisher - the message not yet having travelled to his decayed brain that he no longer exists - picks up the manuscript again after tossing it aside fifty billion years ago, and says, "Okay, it's not bad, actually, we might as well go ahead with it."



Kamo no Chomei, some eight hundred years ago, was witness to a whole series of disasters in the then capital city of Kyoto, including fire, famine and earthquake. He ended his life as a wandering recluse living in a portable hut, rather like the shell of a hermit crab, which is when he wrote Hojoki, A Record of My Hut. So, the end of the world has happened before, and he told the tale. The only thing is, in those days the world was Kyoto; now it's Planet Earth. Not sure there's anywhere left for me to take my portable hut.

Anyway, must get back to my Nero-like fiddling.

We've Finished Our News

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Hello.

It's possible that someone out there is wondering why I've been silent for such a long time, so I feel like offering some kind of explanation. Actually, I'm meant to be working today, so I don't want to make this very long. Also, I don't know exactly what I'm going to say. I mean, I know why I haven't been posting here, but there are actually various reasons, and some of them are not so easy to explain.

Let me start by saying that, for one thing, just about everything I say embarrasses me anyway. I don't really think any of it is true. It seems practically impossible to say anything that is true. If I have seemed to crusade at times in what I say, it's probably because I get fed up with other megolomaniacs stalking the world shoving their truths down the throats of others, and so want to counter that in my own small way. Some people are possibly surprised by my choice of targets, since I haven't been picking on religion a la Richard (Tedious) Dawkins, but have been mainly going for science, which seems to me far more POWERFUL, far more convinced of its own rightness, and therefore far more important as a target. Also, I think some 'truths' are more destructive than others, and the various 'truths' that bolster human materialism must be the most destructive of all.

However, I've never really considered myself to know the truth about anything, and it has been a source of considerable shame and embarrassment to me to spout opinions on this blog as if I know anything at all. I don't know anything. I am simply a dreamer. I no longer really know what to write here.

I haven't had much time to post on this blog either, since I've been busy trying to earn some money, since my financial situation is no longer funny. I've also been working on a number of writing projects about which I suppose I care more.

Something that has been occupying my thoughts very much of late is the content of something recently published on the Net. It is the latest work by author Thomas Ligotti, and it is called The Conspiracy Against the Human Race: A Short Life of Horror. It is being presented for free perusal (and free download for registered members) by Thomas Ligotti Online. I would urge people to read it here while it is still available without charge. It is a virtuoso essay dealing with the problem of human consciousness, and eloquently arguing that the only solution to human suffering is to cease from reproducing. I believe that this is a topic that should be brought out into the light of day, that it should not be marginalised. It is, after all, only the despair that is at the back of ALL OUR MINDS anyway, and if this were not the case, why would we be destroying the world in the manner that we are? It's the end; let us admit it.

This thread in the forums of the site was one that I started, and contains some commentary by me on the essay.

If we don't stop reproducing, it's quite likely that this job will be done for us, by Mother Nature, who spawned us in the first place, and who now seems to be protesting strongly against our attempted matricide. The latest report gives us ten years to drastically change our ways if human civilisation is not going to be destroyed. It's that simple. Anyone who claims to care about their children can no longer ignore this.

With all these considerations on my mind, and with other things to occupy me, I haven't been very keen to post here. On the one hand, it seems like there's nothing left to say except that we're all doomed, and everything else is hollow - the hollow scene at the end of the Holocene. On the other hand, it seems like, after all, the human race should simply let itself die out, anyway, since there is nothing here for us except pain and broken dreams.

But then again, I don't really want to write that kind of stuff. It's fairly easy for me to be nihilistic; I've had a lot of practice. More than that it's easy because that's what people want. If that were not the case, why would we be destroying the planet in the way we are? If I talked about the things that really mattered to me here, the things that really sustained me, I'm sure that people would find them far less acceptable than the idea of the end of the human race. So I won't talk about those things. I've had enough experience of human beings to know that anything precious would be torn to pieces out of spite.

My only regret in writing all this is that I have always had a sense of enormous potential in the human race. It's true that the potential seems thwarted at every turn, but that's the thing I can't quite stand the idea of throwing away. What is that potential? I sense it in the kind of dreams that children have about life. Yes, that's right, I would like people to think of the children. We're supposed to be the adults, after all. You wouldn't think it to look at the world that we have made out of our own despair. What do children have to look up to? Really, what? A bunch of liars and cowards and businessmen. It's enough to make you puke. Some people would say that it's people's personal dreams - in the form of rampant individualism - that have got us into this mess. But I wonder if there isn't some other element apart from selfishness in those dreams. Does being unselfish consist of negating yourself and imposing the same negation on others? Surely there should be some kind of mutual nurturing. This nurturing of children and their dreams certainly does not happen in our current pathetic education system. How could it? The system is only an extension of our society at large, which is fixated on the values of business, that 'respectable', 'useful' pastime that just happens to be destroying the world.

This might sound like I'm leading up to a conclusion, but, as I said, I haven't planned anything to write here. Perhaps the best I can do at the moment is to pose the question, should we cease, for their own sake, to bring children into this stinking cesspit of a world? Or should we somehow admit and face our own despair and go through it to something else, if, indeed, there is something else, so that children's dreams do have a place here? If they don't have a place here, then let's give it up as a bad job.

Thank you. I shall now plaster a smile on my face and continue with the sad cabaret. Or shall I?