The thick façade of civilization

Guest Post from Club Orlov

Michael Jaecks

[This is a guest post by Capt. Ray Jason. To read more of his essays, please visit his blog. (And to read more of mine, please buy the book I just published.)]

Most of the sky was clear and starry, but ten miles out to sea there was a cluster of clouds filled with lightning. I was anchored peacefully behind a low island that afforded me a perfect view of this dramatic spectacle. Sitting on the foredeck with my back against the mast, I sipped some hot sake and marveled at this exquisite display. Each burst of sky fire was contained within an individual cloud. Some would erupt in amber-colored brightness and others would shimmer in soft silver or lavender. The almost Japanese lantern quality of the clouds sparked a memory within me that I struggled to recall. A second cup of sake unlocked the remembrance vault, and the incident drifted back. It was a good one.

About a year earlier AVENTURA was nestled in a pristine cove with a few Indio houses scattered on the shore. One afternoon I heard the nearby children chattering enthusiastically about something. I took my binoculars topside and aimed them towards the commotion. The father was draping a fresh snakeskin over the low branch of a tree. My guess was that the kids were so excited because they would have fresh snake for dinner that evening. But my guess was delightfully wrong.

When nightfall arrived, the clearing around their little house filled with lightning bugs. That was a normal occurrence, but soon the little fireflies discovered the snakeskin, and slipped inside. Their pale neon green illumination created an eerie but magnificent tubular lantern. The children laughed with almost feral joy as they danced around this strange, blinking totem.

***

Watching this lightning now – and recalling those children then – was the catalyst for a slow, gentle, rice-wine contemplation of those qualities of human existence that are enduring and elemental as opposed to those that are temporary and superficial. I wondered how many generations ago that Indio family had discovered that lightning bugs were attracted to snake skins. And I pondered how many generations into the future that folk wisdom would endure. But the more profound question that I considered was whether these self-reliant indigenous people would remain long after the hyper-dependent gringos had vanished. If so, it seemed like poetic and ethical justice.

***

As the modern world careens from one catastrophe to another, a rarely-questioned phrase keeps appearing in print and in conversation. Here is an example of it in common usage: “If the gap between the haves and the have-nots keeps deepening, the thin veneer of civilization could easily be torn apart.” Allow me to question the foundation of this aphorism that we accept so readily. The implication is that if certain societal conditions deteriorate, then huge numbers of people will revert to their natural, uncivilized state which is immoral savagery. I don’t just beg to differ, I insist on differing.

The living arrangement that we refer to as Civilization with a capital C, only arose about 10,000 years ago with the advent of Agriculture with a capital A. The hallmark of this change was that these Neolithic people began domesticating a few crops and a few types of animals. Prior to this, everyone survived through hunting and gathering. And this mode of living did not just span 10,000 years – it lasted for about 10,000 generations. Mostly, it was small bands of about 50 people who lived a co-operative existence where everyone shared the blessings that nature provided. Obviously, if the ethical code of these Paleolithic humans had been immoral savagery, they would not have survived for 200,000 years.

For many decades white male anthropologists tried to convince the world that indigenous people were merely sub-human primitives who deserved to be subdued by the superior white race. They did so to justify the slaughter of millions of First Peoples whose lands and resources were also stolen. So who are the “immoral savages” in such a scenario?

And if such hideous genocidal conduct is not bad enough, let’s examine the way of life of those who were conquered, and compare it with the lifestyle of those who destroyed them. I’ll begin by describing some of the characteristics of tribal living:

· The First peoples understood that Life is a web and all of the interlocking strands are essential to the integrity of the whole. They realized that the geometry of Earth is not a pyramid with humanity at the apex – ordained to rule over all else Instead, they knew that the well-being of their brother and sister creatures and of the forests, rivers and jungles that cocooned them, were of vital importance to the entire planetary dance of life.

· There was superb equality amongst the sexes with the women fully involved in the decision making.

· They understood the wisdom of limits. They did not deplete their hunting and foraging grounds, they limited their population, and they killed only when it was imperative for their survival. They embraced a life of harmony with their neighbors rather than hegemony over them.

· Indigenous tribes were not divided into rulers and ruled. And there were no rich and poor. All shared equally in the spoils of the hunt.

· These people were phenomenally fit and healthy as revealed through modern archaeology and as verified by the anthropologists living amongst the several dozen tribes that have escaped extinction. In fact, after only a few centuries of agriculture, the human skeleton had shrunken by about 6 inches because they switched to a cultivated grain diet rather than the mixed protein, fat and vegetable Paleolithic diet.

· They are blissfully happy – as the contemporary anthropologists report. Because they are in such harmony with each other and with the natural world that sustains them, they always feel like they are “home.”

Now let me contrast that hunter/gatherer culture with how daily living arrangements changed after the arrival of Agriculture – or what I more accurately call “Conquest Agriculture.” I prefer this derogatory term because the early Neanderthals used a “scorched earth” farming practice of destroying anything that was a threat to their crops or domesticated animals.

When big C Civilization arrived, it brought domestication not just to crops and farm animals, but also to the average person. Instead of being wild and feral and self-sufficient, humanity was reduced to dependency and servitude. This was instituted through “division of labor.” Instead of everyone knowing how to feed and clothe and shelter themselves, people were obligated to specialize in just one skill. The vast majority tilled the fields, while others made tools or pottery or baskets – or in the case of the military – they made dead people!

What also arrived with division of labor was hierarchy of power. Suddenly rulers appeared, and unfortunately, those at the top did not achieve that status by being the wisest and most compassionate. They gained prominence by being the most ruthless and immoral. To enforce their edicts, standing armies arrived on the scene. The elites were also served by a class of courtiers or middle managers. And finally the new phenomenon of “priests” appeared. They quickly realized that they could attach themselves to kings or pharaohs for mutual benefit. The religious potentate could demonize certain groups of people to justify their imperial conquest by the secular leader and his army.

So, the hunter/gatherer’s life of free-roaming self-sufficiency was soon displaced by mud-hut, impoverished slavery. Thus from the very outset it was a disastrous development for the vast majority of people. And now let me list some of the historical legacies of Civilization as it wreaked its havoc down the centuries. This is an utterly staggering inventory of pathologies that did not exist in the tribal societies that were exterminated, and is not found in the few dozen that have survived.

· Slavery
· Insanity
· Torture
· Human Sacrifice
· Genocide
· Plagues
· Chronic Loneliness
· Industrial War
· Laws
· Obesity
· Homicidal Dictators
· Asylums
· Heart Attacks
· Lawyers
· Crusades
· Atomic Bombs
· Cancer
· Poverty
· Inquisitions
· Diseases of Civilization
· Witch-hunts
· Drones
· Suicide Bombers
· Drug Addiction
· Taxes
· Robot Soldiers
· Bankers
· Missionaries
· Junk Food
· Overpopulation
· Sweat Shops
· Famine
· Disparity of Wealth
· Sexual Deviancy
· Child Molesters
· Serial Killers
· Compulsive Consumption
· Extinction of Species

It is hard to imagine any rational human being reading that list of atrocities and not saying to themselves, “Why have these consequences of Civilization never been brought to my attention?” That sensible question brings us back to the title of this essay: “The Thick Façade of Civilization.” Here is the standard dictionary definition for the word “façade”: “an outward appearance that is maintained to conceal a less pleasant reality.” Civilization is so toxic to human and animal and planetary well-being, that its true nature must be hidden from people.

And those in charge of the planet – the gatekeepers – or what I prefer to call The Malignant Overlords – do an extraordinary job of keeping that knowledge suppressed. You will never hear “the Downside of Civilization” discussed in the mainstream media or from pulpits or in the classroom. Therefore, the possibility of modern mass society reforming itself backwards towards a more holistic mode of living lightly and sustainably on the Earth is nearly impossible. Even when a major political or economic system is abandoned because of its uselessness, the underlying foundation of Civilization is not allowed to be questioned.

My belief is that only if there is a planet-wide collapse, can the prospect of smaller, tribal-based communities re-emerge. That is why I have dedicated great effort to sharing and refining my concept known as the Sea Gypsy Tribe. (Here is the direct link.) But I emphasize that I do not desire this scenario, since it would involve a massive die-off. But if the worst should occur, I feel it wise to have some concrete strategy for rebuilding a world that might possibly bequeath our descendents Mozart without the Mushroom Cloud.

***

After a couple of hours of savoring the lightning-lush sky, the clouds dispersed and suddenly revealed a handsome, half-moon. Somehow it seemed like there was a message in its appearance. As I contentedly sipped my sake, I searched for some meaning. Then it jolted me. Perhaps the universe was reminding me of what is ephemeral and what is enduring. The magnificent lightning show represented the amazing, electro-hypnotic spell of Civilization. But it swiftly was gone. Whereas the moon rising, as it has done for millions of years, symbolizes that less transitory epoch, when humanity lived in harmony with the planet and its creatures and the inscrutable vastness beyond us.

And perhaps one day that era may return…

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19 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
August 20, 2014 10:23 am

I think that sums things up quite nicely.

Stucky
Stucky
August 20, 2014 10:56 am

If non-civilization is so great, why doesn’t Capt. Ray Jason live accordingly?

Instead, he travels around the world in his nice modern fully equipped sailboat/yacht — which, correct me if I’m wrong, is a product of civilization — and sipping his pina-colada while watching aboriginal children playing with lightning bugs.

It takes a shitload of money to live like that. Money …. that’s a civilization thingy also. Right?

It’s a good article though. But, he’s a dick, imho.

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
August 20, 2014 10:57 am

Wow.

Sorry HSF – have to disagree with you on this one. Things aren’t and have never been quite this simple.

I always get a kick out of how we look at the lives of “indigenous” peoples as some ideal, pastoral/hunter gathering life fraught with little stress etc.

Let’s understand something about most “indigenous” folks that many fail to understand or see. They are human beings just like the rest of us. In places like North America they too had things like war and slavery. You don’t have to do much research to find these things out – a little research on the net will point you in the right direction.

Moreover they also had caste systems and social structures. Some patriarchal and some matriarchal. These people had enough power that they have been able to sell their own people out throughout history to the “whites”, each other and a myriad of other folks. Moreover, particularly in North America, indigenous leadership continues to do so – reaping the benefits of government money for the few while the greater tribe suffers in abject poverty.

I would add that this “political” animal is prevalent throughout almost all human societies. Indigenous people being no exception.

Additionally there is growing proof that human migration and civilizations in all their forms is far older than 10,000 years therefor throwing the concept of exactly what “indigenous” means into question. I would encourage all here to at the very least visit a site called “Ancient America” http://ancientamerica.com or to even listen to some of the lectures given by individuals such as Graham Hancock (as long as you can get past his ideas surrounding “aliens” he has great insight into the history of human civilization and migration).

The point is – we all have something to teach one another – “indigenous” people included. But articles like this border on race baiting. I was born on this continent. My family has been here now for 6 generations of human beings. How long before we can call ourselves “indigenous” as well? We are not some “white scourge” just human beings like the rest of my neighbours trying to make their way in a somewhat messed up world.

Would also be nice if authors such as this listed some of the benefits of the modern world (there are a few). Such as:

Better sanitation
Lower infant mortality rate
Better communication

To name only a few I am sure.

The history of man is a history of struggle between extremes. Liberty is our natural state – it is how our creator intended us to live. When we are close to it we have prosperity and stability. When we are far from it we have destruction and upheaval. This has been true for all societies throughout history. “Indigenous” and otherwise.

Francis

Anon Guy
Anon Guy
August 20, 2014 11:17 am

Wow had to check the web bar. Thought I was reading HuffPo for a second!

There was NEVER ritualistic slaughter, slavery, rapes, raids, or cannibalism, or inter-tribal warfare, and driving herds of buffalo off of cliffs is surely “in tune with nature” right? The evils are all “white civilization inventions, right?

Please read some REAL anthropology, not the politically correct “moral savage” bullshit.

Let the “Nobel Savage” meme die the quiet death it deserves.

Stucky
Stucky
August 20, 2014 11:27 am

Francis Marion

Excellent post!

For some reason unbeknownst to me, Capt. Ray Jason loves to romanticize primitive life.

One of the first questions that popped in my head was; “What are this guy’s QUALIFICATIONS??”. Is he an anthropologist, or some other kind of scientist? Has he been published in in any respectable journals? Or, is he just regurgitating stuff he read elsewhere from others, or worse, is he just bullshitting?

I mean, he writes stuff like this; —- “There was superb equality amongst the sexes with the women fully involved in the decision making.”

Really, how in the fuck would he know that?? That’s waaaaay “out” there. Did he live amongst them? I’m not even sure real scientists have enough data to make such a bold claim.

Oh, and this … which really doesn’t quite fit with his lovey-dovey caveman thesis;

“49,000 years ago in a cave in northern Spain, twelve Neanderthals were murdered and eaten by another group of Neanderthals. This grisly scene may tell a larger story about the reasons why our humanoid cousins ultimately died out.”

—– article here, http://io9.com/5715409/murder-scene-might-reveal-why-neanderthals-went-extinct

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
August 20, 2014 11:52 am

I wasn’t implying that there is anything romantic about a hunter gatherer lifestyle, but rather that most of human history- in fact the vast majority of it- was lived outside of the organized constructs of civilization and it’s division of labor. I find modern humans that live without effort- the FSA as an example- to be far more primitive as life forms than an Amazonian hunter gatherer tribe.

The biggest problem with civilization is that it allows for and in fact encourages humans to basically “sit out” their lives at the expense of those who do the heavy lifting. That kind of thing was alien to pre-civilized peoples. Top and bottom. A Kardashian is no different than a Ferguson looter in my eyes, they both live off of the production of others while adding zero to the civilization itself, in fact they are busy killing it off. Maybe that’s the acceptable losses in order to maintain indoor plumbing, but perhaps there is a better way.

flash
flash
August 20, 2014 12:08 pm

“This is an utterly staggering inventory of pathologies that did not exist in the tribal societies that were exterminated, and is not found in the few dozen that have survived.”

What a load of stagnant pot-latchism bovine excrement ..

Man has always preyed on other animals ,even humans since the beginning time…obviously Captain Turd Polisher never read any ancient history…including the old testament.

This is an utterly staggering inventory of pathologies that did not exist in the tribal societies that were

e.g….http://www.theguardian.com/science/2009/may/17/neanderthals-cannibalism-anthropological-sciences-journal

How Neanderthals met a grisly fate: devoured by humans
A fossil discovery bears marks of butchering similar to those made when cutting up a deer

One of science’s most puzzling mysteries – the disappearance of the Neanderthals – may have been solved. Modern humans ate them, says a leading fossil expert.

The controversial suggestion follows publication of a study in the Journal of Anthropological Sciences about a Neanderthal jawbone apparently butchered by modern humans. Now the leader of the research team says he believes the flesh had been eaten by humans, while its teeth may have been used to make a necklace.

Fernando Rozzi, of Paris’s Centre National de la Récherche Scientifique, said the jawbone had probably been cut into to remove flesh, including the tongue. Crucially, the butchery was similar to that used by humans to cut up deer carcass in the early Stone Age. “Neanderthals met a violent end at our hands and in some cases we ate them,” Rozzi said.

flash
flash
August 20, 2014 12:15 pm

@ Francis Marion +100 …liberty is a modern concept mostly borne upon the advent of English rule of law .Where influence of western civilization/English rule of law wanes so does individual liberty.
Bet on it..

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
August 20, 2014 12:20 pm

HSF says:

“I find modern humans that live without effort- the FSA as an example- to be far more primitive as life forms than an Amazonian hunter gatherer tribe.

The biggest problem with civilization is that it allows for and in fact encourages humans to basically “sit out” their lives at the expense of those who do the heavy lifting.”

I would argue that it is not modern civilization that allows this but rather a lack of civility i.e.: a disregard for the reality of what “living” really means and a lack of respect towards one another. This is actually a rather old meme that has been recycled continuously throughout history regardless of the level of “civilization” in which it appears. It is a distinctly human problem and is the result of our imperfect nature which is exacerbated when corruption is woven into the political fabric of any level of society. God’s curse on man perhaps?

History may not repeat but it sure does rhyme…. does it not?

Francis

Stucky
Stucky
August 20, 2014 12:20 pm

“It’s a good article though.” ———— me

What the hell was I thinking. I reread the article more slowly, and a critical eye. Wow.

He says this —— “These people were phenomenally fit and healthy.”

That’s unequivocal bullshit.

Yes, cavemen didn’t eat grains, chemicals, and all the bullshit modern man does. However, it is believed their life span was about 30 years, and it wasn’t just because Barney The Dinosaur ate them. They had their own set of unique diseases.

Nevertheless, BOTH sides need to proceed with extreme caution. Fact is, we have VERY few human bones from the period because it takes some very unusual conditions to preserve human remains for more than 10,000 years. So, to suggest that these few remains are representative of the entire human population at that time require a huge leap of faith. In a nutshell, we just don’t really know …. so, to say they were healthier is pure bullshit.

Gayle
Gayle
August 20, 2014 1:22 pm

When I was 10, I met Tariri, the chief of the hunter-gatherer Shapra tribe in Peru. He had been brought to church by one of the missionaries (a woman from our community) who had carried civilization, specifically Christian civilization, to his jungle home. I was fascinated by the collection of shrunken heads he had with him, evidence of his life before civilization arrived. Consumed with superstition, anger, and killing, his life revolved around raids on neighboring tribes and the shrunken heads prepared to be worn as gruesome ornaments on strings around his neck.

His tour of the US included an appearance on the Ralph Edwards show, a visit to the Peruvian embassy, and attendance at a Billy Graham crusade. He spoke wherever he went about the positive changes in his village and in his own life as a result of the missionaries’ efforts to learn the language and then teach the principles of Christian faith. His people became hungry for education and learned to look at paper (read).

The particular artifacts of American civilization that Tariri wished he could take back to his village included electric light switches to turn on lights, a suitcase, a model of a four-engine plane, a watermelon, some cherries, and two very large dogs. Later, I’m certain that Tariri appreciated civilization even more, when his son, crippled in both feet from birth, was flown to the Mayo Clinic for successful surgery.

His autobiography, Tariri My Story, is an interesting read and can still be found on Amazon.

Another good book is Ishi, Last of His Tribe, about the lone survivor of the Yana tribe in Northern California and his encounter with, and adjustment to, civilization. It is a more wistful story, as Ishi became literally a living museum piece, the object of anthropological study by highly civilized people. His brain was kept by the Smithsonian until 1999, when it was returned to descendants of his tribe.

Stucky
Stucky
August 20, 2014 2:26 pm

Gayle

In the 1950’s five missionaries went to Ecuador, and were promptly killed by members of the Waorani tribe. When I was in my 30’s I met two sons; one was the son of the killed missionary Jim Elliot, the other was the son of the Waorani man who killed Mr. Elliot. Of course, the theme was about the power of reconciliation, and it was, indeed, powerful.

One thing I clearly remember, the Waorani son was QUITE HAPPY that he and his tribe no longer lived as they once did.

Anyway, there’s a book about it, and it’s a decent read.
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http://www.christianbook.com/through-gates-of-splendor/elisabeth-elliot/9781598564693/pd/564693?dv=c&en=google-pla&event=PLASHOP&kw=books-0-20&p=1167941&gclid=CJyr66a6osACFWwQ7AodPmMAkA

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
August 20, 2014 2:26 pm

Hmmm, kinda sorta sounds like a primitive form of Communism to me (shudder the thought).

Desertrat
Desertrat
August 20, 2014 2:27 pm

Setting prairie fires to drive bison over a cliff was a true indicator of game management, right?

When grains are ground in mutates, folks chew on stone dust as well as the “bread”. Teeth wear down rather rapidly–which contributes to short life spans. Really healthy, right?

Crippling from broken bones notably reduces one’s hunting ability.

Shrunken heads are not a sign of peaceful coexistence. Nor was the cannibalism extant among the primitives of New Guinea as recently as WW II.

Desertrat
Desertrat
August 20, 2014 2:29 pm

Typo: “metates”, the rock bowls found in archaeological sites.

unePluiebreve
unePluiebreve
August 20, 2014 2:38 pm

For those interested (points -> Stucky) two texts:

Stone Age Economics – Marshall Sahlins – ISBN 0-202-01098-8 – a little old but a basic reference. Have not read it myself yet, just browsed it here and there. I have it on pdf but I assume used copies are still around.

First Peoples In A New World – Colonizing Ice Age America – David J Meltzer – ISBN 978-0-520-25052-9. The peopling of North and South America. Interesting reading at the moment. Click through to Amazon from here…

Gayle
Gayle
August 20, 2014 3:07 pm

Stucky

That book has been on my ever’-growing “must read” list. Those missionaries were sponsored by Mission Aviation Fellowship, which was headquartered until a recent escape to Idaho here in Redlands. One day I went to their offices, and there in the lobby sat the plane you refer to. It seemed so small for such a big effort! One of those missionaries was Nate Saint, and his wife Rachel was one of the wives who returned to the Aucas to complete the work of reconciliation you refer to. Just prior to that, she spent some time working on translation in Tariri’s village.

Billy
Billy
August 20, 2014 11:34 pm

“The living arrangement that we refer to as Civilization with a capital C, only arose about 10,000 years ago with the advent of Agriculture with a capital A. The hallmark of this change was that these Neolithic people began domesticating a few crops and a few types of animals. Prior to this, everyone survived through hunting and gathering. And this mode of living did not just span 10,000 years – it lasted for about 10,000 generations. Mostly, it was small bands of about 50 people who lived a co-operative existence where everyone shared the blessings that nature provided. Obviously, if the ethical code of these Paleolithic humans had been immoral savagery, they would not have survived for 200,000 years.”

Bullshit.

There is a archaeological site called Gobekli Tepe… it’s not just one site, it’s multiple sites – 20 in all – that range all over a series of hills in what is now Turkey. That one site singlehandedly pushed back every known estimate as to when humans first developed “Civilization”… that one site is thousands of years older than the Pyramids, and even pre-dates our “estimates” of things such as crop domestication, animal husbandry and loads of other things…

Thing is, with only small bands of 50-something people, you can’t build these massive, megalithic structures.

You need bodies. LOTS of them – multiples of thousands – working together and directed by a hierarchy – in other words, someone has to be in charge.

You need to feed all these people, which means you need a reliable food source, and chucking spears and gathering berries ain’t gonna cut it.

You need tools to fashion the stones and carve the images, which requires metallurgy.

You need some type of engineering in order to create the stones and transport them to the sites, then build the thing in all it’s complexity.

Just to build these sites, you literally need a civilization to do it… speak chucking cave dwellers? Not so much. The number of people involved, someone directing them, massive food resources, water, sanitation, places to live, a religious belief system (since they’re assumed to be temples), metallurgy, engineering, animal domestication and husbandry, crop domestication…

Then, and we don’t know why, whoever built them, buried them… on purpose. To preserve them.

Thing is, we don’t know who built them. Or why, really… it’s like they just appeared, whole cloth. And they are staggeringly ancient…

So, dude is way the hell off on his “ten thousand” years that we’ve only had “civilization”…

Which fits my own personal theory that many civilizations have risen and fallen over the last 250,000 years (or whatever it is that we’ve been around…). We’ve had what? 4 major glaciations in the last quarter million years? “Where’s the evidence?” they ask… Well, if you drive a mile-thick glacier over a town or settlement, then leave it there for a few thousand years, there’s not gonna be much “evidence” left, now is there?

And these same eggheads say that if we all vanished tomorrow, there would be literally nothing left of our civilization after 10,000 years… except maybe the pyramids – they’re just too damn massive – and Mount Rushmore. That’s it.

Now imagine a human civilization arose 50,000 or 75,000 years ago… think there’d be much evidence of them laying around? Me, neither…

Then there’s crazy shit like those books the Hindu’s got… the ones that are thousands of years old and speak of crazy shit… wars that sound exactly like a nuclear exchange today…. then we go and dig where the “battles” supposedly took place, and find skeletons with burns and high levels of radiation… total WTF? type shit…

Or the fact that an Egyptian mummy, thousands of years old, tested positive for cocaine. Problem is that cocaine is only grown in South America…

I’m thinking there’s way, way more history to humans than we can possibly imagine…

The rest of dude’s post is just drum-circle, kumbayah, White men are responsible for all the ills in the world, civilization is evil, etc, etc…

Throw dude in a hut made of sticks, shit and mud… give him a pointy stick and a loincloth and see how long he likes his new morally-superior lifestyle…

I give him 11 minutes…