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Ron Suskind in Today's NY Times


The Crisis Last Time

Suskind drags an important teaching moment out of the collective memory hole.

I am living in a land so ravaged by brain dysfunction that nobody has anything more than a very short term memory. We are unable have a national conversation that spans events of more than a couple of days in duration. We have one presidential candidate that cannot remember, in the afternoon, what he promised in the morning.

In a traditional society, the old ones represent the living history of the tribe. They can remember those events that preceeded the existence of the younger members, and provide continuity of cultural memory across the generations.

We have no such institution. We are a people unable to remember our past.

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Great reminder

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Ah, Enron. Those were the days.

Seems quaint now.

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What was it you were saying again?

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I don't remember what I just read.

Did I just read something?

I wonder: do I know how to read?

Did I at one time?

Is wakingness a one-dimensional present?

Mr. Greenspan slapped the table. “There’s been too much gaming of the system,” he thundered. “Capitalism is not working! There’s been a corrupting of the system of capitalism.”

This warms my socialist heart quite a bit.

It's because the older generations have problems with the Intertubes.

Not all of them, to be sure, but enough that the corporate media is their only real information diet. The corporate media doesn't like nuance or history as it makes today's storyline less credible.

Conversely, those under 40 are by and large web-enabled and very comfortable snatching data out of the rabbit hole to double-check talking points or to flesh out the anemic fare offered on TV.

I have a feeling that this is the year the Gen X comes of age with Gen Y coming along as well, years ahead of schedule.

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I was raised by a kindly old gentleman in the wilderness near the Rio Branco. He died of natural causes when I was 16, and I drifted down river in a bark canoe not knowing what I would find and eventually arrived at a settlement of Franciscan missionaries.It was then I discovered that we had not been the only white men left after the Nuclear Holocaust, that in fact, there had never been a Nuclear Holocaust, and there was no need to forge our own bronze and iron and live off the bounty of the rain forest. I was probably kidnapped as a small child. I have dim memories of someone called Mae and Pai. I wandered the Pan American highway till I settled for a time in Zipolite, Mexico, where I worked as a silversmith. Eventually I met a beautiful young woman who was independently wealthy and she married me and took me to live in N Ca where we live on a cliff overlooking the Pacific. I have my own forge, and do blacksmithing for the local horses, in addition to my silver and bronze work. Adaptation to modern civilization has been a challenge for me ever since I realized I was deprived of my natural family and raised by someone who, though kind, must have been something of a lunatic. He did teach me many practical survival skills, however so I guess he wasn't all bad. I have ambivalent feelings about my whole childhood.

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