14 Words to Teach Your Children… If You’re Honest

14 Words to Teach Your Children… If You’re Honest

TeachYourChildren

Imagine a pretty spring day, you’re standing on your front porch or some other pleasant vantage point and looking out at a sunlit landscape: trees, grass, and singing birds. Then your five-year-old child or grandchild walks up to you and tugs on your hand to get your attention. You turn and the child asks, “What kind of world is this?”

What do you reply?

This innocent child deserves the truth. You won’t be able to use fancy words or long explanations, but truth doesn’t require those things. This child is ready to hear the truth about the world – he or she is primed for it. This is the kind of moment that comes along haphazardly, and you can’t be sure if or when another might show itself. Your answer may affect this child for the rest of his or her life. What do you say?

The 14 Words

First I’m going to tell you the 14 words, then I’ll explain further. But as you stand on the porch, away from everything but nature and your child, the only intimidations, biases, and slogans present will be those inside of you… and your child should be insulated from such things. You have to speak truth. And as I say, it doesn’t have to be long and complex; in fact it can’t be, if you want to help a five year old.

Here are the 14 words:

We are a beautiful species, living in a beautiful world, ruled by abusive systems.

Later – after true words have sunk into the young mind – you can explain that we’re not a perfectly beautiful species, that most people are often confused and that a few are just plain bad. You can further explain that volcanoes and hurricanes and grizzly bears exist. But if you value your child enough to tell them the plain truth, you’ll tell him or her the 14 words first and let them sink in before getting to the small print.

Now, with that said, I’ll move to some explanation for the adults.

A Beautiful Species

11,000 or 12,000 years ago, humanity – perhaps five million of them – stumbled out from an ice age and began to spread across the earth, most of them having nothing in the way of science and technology. Since then, we’ve learned to fill the earth with food, build machines that race across the face of the earth, sail oceans and streams, and fly through the atmosphere at fantastic speeds. Imagine trying to explain these things to the people coming down from their receding glaciers.

And not only this, but we’ve cured the vast majority of diseases, figured out the smallest parts of the machinery of life, built compendia of human knowledge, made them available anywhere and everywhere, and landed men on the moon.

We are a magnificent species. If that triggers “Never forget the darkness!” voices in you, please hang on to “We are a magnificent species” until they subside.

Here are two passages from G.K. Chesterton’s book, The Defendant, that bear upon dark, automatic thoughts:

There runs a strange law through the length of human history – that men are continually tending to undervalue their environment, to undervalue their happiness, to undervalue themselves. The great sin of mankind, the sin typified by the fall of Adam, is the tendency, not towards pride, but towards this weird and horrible humility.

Every one of the great revolutionists, from Isaiah to Shelly, have been optimists. They have been indignant, not about the badness of existence, but about the slowness of men in realizing its goodness.

You can find the same thing in the Bible, by the way. Theologies be damned, this is what Psalm 82 says, and which Jesus repeated:

You are gods; all of you are children of the most High.

A Beautiful World

This is a beautiful world. Get out and look at it: lay outside on a summer night and gaze at the stars for an hour; explore the wilderness. Don’t watch it on TV; go out and experience it.

It is beautiful. Perhaps not perfectly beautiful, but one flaw among fifty beauties does not negate those beauties.

Abusive Systems

We all know the systems that rule mankind are abusive. I’m not going to go through itemized lists, since we complain about these things every day. You already know. The problem with most of mankind is not that they can’t recognize abuse; it’s that they’ve been trained to think they deserve it.

So, I’m going to make one short statement, then set this point aside:

Unless you think your children deserve to be abused, you can’t tell them government is okay, much less good.

Now, let’s be clear on another thing: Rulership requires us to stay focused on evil. They have to frighten people and portray their competitors as “evil Huns.” They have to publicize threat levels and convince people they need to be saved from impending death. And of course, their dear friends in the media promote evil-consciousness 24/7.

Do you think, just maybe, that all this fear has bad effects upon us?

The Truth

We are surrounded, every day, by people who cooperate, who assist one another, and who care about one another. But those aren’t the things we think about – those are things we’ve learned to ignore. The flashing images of evil surround us and scream at us, after all: The Russians are going to attack, the other candidate is going to destroy all you hold dear, SARS (or bird flu or swine flu or Ebola) is about to kill us all! It’s a long, dark symphony of manipulation.

The truth is we’re a beautiful species, living in a beautiful world.

The systems that wish to rule us are quite otherwise.

Paul Rosenberg

[Editor’s Note: Paul Rosenberg is the outside-the-Matrix author of FreemansPerspective.com, a site dedicated to economic freedom, personal independence and privacy. He is also the author of The Great Calendar, a report that breaks down our complex world into an easy-to-understand model. Click here to get your free copy.]

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14 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
February 16, 2016 1:46 pm

Crock of crap.

We’re a species ruled by systems we created out of our own nature that reflect what we are.

Those systems weren’t forced on us by space aliens or something, we made them in our own image.

We may have the potential to be and do good, but good is not our core nature.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
February 16, 2016 1:49 pm

We are a species to which God has given life, earth and free will. And we have messed it up.

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
February 16, 2016 1:54 pm

Abusers always seek out and gravitate to power, to do their deeds. Only solution is to weed them out.
Best to start out at the top, and work down. The wannabees will fall into line real quick.

David
David
February 16, 2016 1:56 pm

I agree with anonymous, mankind is easily corruptible and tends toward jealousy. The founding fathers knew this and tried to restrain the rapacity, and even more dangerous, the true believers’ willingness to do what it takes to “improve” things of those who want to be in government. It worked really well for 150 years, but the evil people can no longer be restrained.

Stucky
Stucky
February 16, 2016 1:59 pm

This Freeman guy is very pie-in-the-sky with his outlooks. Pollyanna.

Lemme attempt to fix his 14 words.

“We are a beautiful (but, violent) species, living in a beautiful (yet, violent) world, ruled by abusive (and, violent) systems.”

kokoda
kokoda
February 16, 2016 2:17 pm

I’ll disagree with the prior commenters: It seems the most ardent objection is to “ruled by abusive systems”

I’m sure the author understands that human rulers are the abusers and he explained the exception to beautiful species by – “that most people are often confused and that a few are just plain bad.” I personally think it is more than a few, along all disciplines in life, not just politicians.

Anyone that continually focuses on the negative is a loser. One has to stay positive; accept that life is going to punch you in the gut, but you have to stand up, dust off your butt, have a positive outlook within the constraints of the system, and go forward.

Muck About
Muck About
February 16, 2016 3:21 pm

I agree with Mr. Rosenberg completely. The only thing he didn’t mention is that Nature, beautiful and awe inspiring though it is, is two things. It’s awe inspiring because we evolved in it, were shaped by it and live it as superbly adapting beings to enjoy everything about it. The other thing is that Nature is 100% uncaring about us, what we do, how we do it, and who we do it to..

The Universe is what it is. Uncaring, unforgiving and totally non-humanized in that it has no feelings, no empathy, no love, no hate— nothing except what it is.

In our lives – short and mostly meaningless as they may be – must adapt to what Nature rules predicate and insist upon. Both good and bad. We’ve learned to split the atom (probably bad – but the vote is still out on that one), put satellites in orbit (again good or bad depending upon the intended use thereof), filled those arable areas of Earth with sufficient food to feed the ever expanding demands of human animals but never forget, Thomas Malthus is a right today as he was when he first explained it. It’s just that technology has managed to expand our our reach and productivity far beyond what Malthus ever though we’d be about to do!.. Sooner or later, Malthus projections will indeed apply (baring an extreme die off of half the population due to war or natural disaster).

To me, on my morning walks I shrink the Universe down to a moment of nature – today, I watched a red tailed hawk catch a small glass snake that was within ten feet of me, turn and fly to a street light post and tear it to pieces, carefully feeding each piece to a yearling red tail hawk that hadn’t learned to hunt yet. This is my world, moments of nature of a raccoon cleaning out my bird feeder at dawn to our resident female bald eagle swooping along the tree line behind my house and snap up a mouse to take back to her nest to feed two eaglets that will be ready to try their wings in a month or so. I have three donkeys in the field bordering my back yard that gallop over to me when they see me to get a hand out of carrots or broccoli or some old collard greens from our kitchen garden – and if I don’t have anything to hand out, you would laugh your ass off at the disappointed bellowing and hee-hawing that results when I come up short (I try never to come up short!)..But they never stop coming over to me with hope springing eternal for a hand out!

I take every day, appreciate the beauty and peace of it and enjoy it to 100%. So should you..

MA

starfcker
starfcker
February 16, 2016 3:27 pm

Great post, muck

Muck About
Muck About
February 16, 2016 5:37 pm

@starfcker: Thanks.. My post was from the heart. There are thing, every day that can be treasured and enjoyed and hoarded for enjoyment later if you just take the trouble to do it..

Our world may be populated by a small proportion of evil doers, assholes of the first order whose goals are the domination of others. But there are millions of other human beings who are good neighbors, friends and people who would give you the shirts off their backs and the last tin of food in their pantry if you needed it. I prefer to associate with the last group.

My favorite passtime is making love to a beautiful woman with no thought in mind of my personal pleasure. I’ve been married to such a wonderful woman for 59 years and she feels the same way I do and I am constantly amazed at the sublime pleasure – from blazing fire to lovely lower levels of companionship we constantly achieve and can only wish that others could manage the same transitions.

MA

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
February 16, 2016 5:44 pm

Muck, that was a great post. Sometimes it’s hard to see the beauty of nature through the evil mankind has created. I do try and succeed much of the time. Get out in nature, it does a soul good!

Erumpo
Erumpo
February 16, 2016 6:21 pm

sometimes , every once in awhile , something gets thru and reminds me what being human is about.
Wont make any sense , but this is one of those moments .
Ty Admin and those who post .

Suzanna
Suzanna
February 16, 2016 7:02 pm

@ Muck

You say nature is oblivious to us and then you give examples of

nature (the hawk, the eagle, the racoon, and the donkeys) that

are interactive with us. I grow plants from seed, and I know that

I can communicate with those baby plants. I have house plants

that “zing” when I touch them. Plants bushes and trees can talk

back…but you may need to nudge them first. The flowers and

vegetable plants can be aware also. My fears are around our

natural environment being ruined by chemicals. And all they

involve/no details here. The worst thing is the absence of bees.

I plant to attract and provide for them, but alas, there are few.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
February 16, 2016 8:29 pm

Muck it is what it is. In the case of Bruce Jenner, it is what it isn’t.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 23, 2016 9:58 pm

wrong 14 words.