The Psychology Of Doomer-Labeling
I have asked
myself repeatedly where this label of "doomer" comes from when applied
to people who continue to talk about opportunity and rebirth, yet
refuse to sell the snake oil of "hope." I didn't fully understand the
"doomer" label until a friend called after having just heard an
interview with Harvey Wasserman, co-author of HOW THE GOP STOLE
AMERICA'S 2004 ELECTION & IS RIGGING 2008. What Wasserman stated in
the interview and what he also implied in his article "
Do The Neo-Cons Need Karl Rove When They Can Count On The Democrats?"
is that overwhelmingly, the progressive left does not want to hear the
irrefutable documentation of the stealing of the 2000 and 2004
elections-or the compelling evidence that the 2008 election is already stolen! It
appears that if they were to fully comprehend the futility of voting in
national elections, they might feel-oh dare I say it-drum
roll-hopeless?
This reminds me very much of the
alcoholic/abusive family system where abuse and addiction are rampant,
and someone in the family breaks silence and speaks the truth about
what is so. Immediately, that family member is scapegoated, labeled a
troublemaker, incorrigible, ungrateful, or in the case of the abuse of
the planet and the political systems that enable it, a negative-minded
"doomer." Even worse, in the abusive system, the truth-teller becomes
the identified patient, that is, "this family would be just fine if it
weren't for the troublemaker." Translation: Why can't you stop being a
"doomer" and just vote Democratic, buy a hybrid car, put some curly
lightbulbs in your lamps, and think positively?
One result of this finely-tuned denial system is that the truth-teller
ends up feeling the feelings that everyone else in the system refuses
to feel. The other members of the system are numb or cheerful, but the
truth-teller is wracked with anxiety, anger, or depression because he
or she is carrying the emotional baggage of the entire system.
Pardon a little bit of ancient mythology, but I'm quite certain that
Noah was called a "doomer". Talk about negative! Talk about raining, so
to speak, on humanity's "perky party"! Truly an identified patient he
was.
Derrick Jensen states that everything in the current
system of civilization is set up to protect the abusers. Those who
refuse to do so will be scapegoated-if not by the abusers, then by
their "siblings" who beg them to be quiet and maintain faith in the
system.
Please understand that I am not forbidding
disagreement. If you can look squarely and rationally at the evidence
for the likelihood that civilization has entered a state of collapse
and knowing the evidence, disagree with the probability of the
extinction of the planet and its inhabitants, that is your prerogative.
What I resent is being scapegoated because I have a different
perception and I refuse to look at the evidence and still support the
enablers of the system that is murdering the earth and every life form
on it or because I refuse to say that everything is going to somehow
work itself out, that politicians will save us, that solar energy or
carbon credits will provide the magic bullet, or that technology will
come to our rescue. And-what is more, I refuse to accept the
scapegoating of those who absolutely will not face the overwhelming
evidence of stolen national elections or who, for whatever reason,
expect me to carry the feelings they will not feel and who identify me
as the "troubled patient" in their terminally toxic, hope-addicted
reality.
Repeatedly, these individuals do not hear or see me
when I refer to the opportunity that the collapse of civilization may
afford us or the rebirth of human consciousness that could unfold as
the old paradigm crumbles and a new one erupts. In my book in process,
I am among other things, painstakingly taking the reader through a
process of introspection regarding collapse and rebirth, inviting
her/him to be aware of the feelings that loom or lie dormant around the
end of the world as we have known it. I do not expect it to be easy for
anyone to acknowledge the reality of collapse; it certainly has not
been for me. I have only been able to open to its irrefutable truth
because I have had the support of others and because of a deep and
abiding sense of meaning that I experience in the demise of empire. For
me, both are extremely "positive" forces in my life-more authentically
positive than "hope" or "optimism" or voting for the Democratic Party.
When I speak of rebirth, this is not for me some airy-fairy fantasy
about "positive outcome". In my opinion, rebirth is absolutely the most
apt description of civilization's demise. For most women, birth is no
walk in the park-it's painful, bloody, and very uncertain. What is born
may be healthy and intact, or it may be impaired. Whoever is born must
be nurtured, tended, given structure and limits, and he or she will at
some point (or many times) break one's heart. Parents almost always
admit that giving birth has changed them, and that as a result they
will never be the same. Giving birth consigns one to a lifetime of
responsibility and care for one's offspring; sacrifices must be made,
priorities re-arranged, personal comforts postponed, risks taken-all
with no guarantee of "happily ever after." From my perspective, rebirth
and collapse are inextricably connected and consistently mirror each
other.
Mimicking Mainstream Media
The "doomer" label
belies the labeler's inability to grasp the complexity of the person or
position he/she is labeling. Had the reviewer of "What A Way To Go"
mentioned above, thoroughly understood what the documentary is
communicating, he would not have applied the label of "doomer" to it.
Yes, the film maker lets us know that he is not interested in
presenting any "happy chapters" that let the viewer off the hook, but
he also repeatedly emphasizes the "new stories" that can be told and
the new opportunities offered as a result of collapse, culminating in
film's pivotal and haunting question: Who do I want to be in the face
of collapse?
Moreover, "doomer" labeling demonstrates a lack
of capacity for comprehending paradoxes such as: Yes, civilization is
collapsing, and that is an opportunity for rebirth-or one of my
favorites from Derrick Jensen: "We're fucked, and life is really,
really good." Paradox, two apparent opposites being true at the same
time, complexity, holistic rather than black and white, either/or
thinking appear to elude those who simplistically slap the unwarranted
"doomer" label on whomever they choose.
Most egregiously,
however, "doomer" labeling replicates the style of superficial
mainstream and sensationalist journalism which refuses to deal with
complexities and applies labels so that readers will not have to
grapple with multi-layered reality. The prime motivation in this style
of journalism is speed and brevity. As a result, readers are unable to
view the rich and convoluted tapestry of an event, a story, a person,
or a concept. Hence the old paradigm endures with no willingness to
construct a new one!
Refusal To Admit That We Have No Government
A careful study of recent American history which I have endeavored to
convey in my book U.S. History Uncensored reveals that although we may
have a bureaucracy in Washington that operates myriad departments and
provides services, in reality, we have no government. That is to say
that what used to be the function of government has been usurped by
corporations and centralized financial systems. Repeatedly, icons of
the progressive left such as Jeremy Scahill in his brilliant book
Blackwater, Naomi Klein in
Shock Doctrine and in her latest article "
Outsourcing Government", and Arianna Huffington
as she appeared
on Keith Olbermann's "Countdown" on October 19 are telling us that it
is now virtually impossible to determine where government ends and
corporations begin. Only a few years ago, these same individuals
probably would not have acknowledged this reality which actually has
its roots in the late-nineteenth century and came to fruition in the
Reagan and Clinton administrations.
Perpetually rigged
elections are one glaring characteristic of this reality. If there is
no government, then there are no authentic choices in terms of
political candidates because a candidate cannot even be nominated for
the presidency unless she/he is owned by the plutocracy. The
progressive left loves to deny the extent to which candidates are owned
and persists in rationalizing: "But he/she has done so many wonderful
things; he/she is so sincere; he/she has to appear conservative, but
when he/she really sits in the Oval Office, everything will be
different. She/he is the lesser evil." Anyone who does not buy into
this delusion must then be marginalized by labeling that person
pessimistic, doomish, or even crazy. Moreover, this kind of
marginalization mirrors the exclusion of individuals and groups by the
political right that it finds intolerable, and thus I return to the
thesis of Harvey Wasserman's article: Why would neocons need Karl Rove
when they have the Democrats?
Participation in the federal
election process sanctions the lie that authentic choices exist in
presidential politics and condones the use of the election chimera for
the purposes of maintaining social control. It is progressive America's
method of choice for maintaining the dirty little secret of the toxic
system-that Daddy is raping the kids, but we can't talk about it! If we
do admit this to ourselves and each other, we will feel hopeless,
angry, sad, disempowered-unless, we accept that all of this is the
result of the collapse of civilization, and that the most powerful act
for any of us is admitting that collapse is real and beginning as soon
as possible our preparation for it.
Overall, the Democratic
progressive left refuses to acknowledge that not only do presidents and
political parties not govern the United States, but they are in fact,
irrelevant. The sovereignty of nations has been irreversibly eroded by
corporatism and organizations such as the Bilderberg Group, the Council
on Foreign Relations, and the Trilateral Commission whose agenda is the
dissolution of nation-states
and the global dominance of corporations. Almost all of the candidates
progressives tout as capable of reversing America's descent into
fascism are prominent members of one or more of these hegemonic
organizations.
As Mike Byron states in the quote at the
beginning of this article: People must first be made to give up on the
existing system before they will become receptive to fundamental
change. As long as we cling to the teddy bears of progressive politics,
we embrace the old paradigm of civilization and paralyze ourselves so
that we are unable to explore deeper layers of our current predicament.
As a result, we allow ourselves to be distracted from the dire
exigencies of collapse and any possibility of rationally preparing to
navigate it, which only increases the severity of its repercussions.
Collapse/Rebirth Vs. Doomerism
I have written profusely about "
the end of the world as we have known it",
but at the same time, I insist that the "endings" of which I write, are
also beginnings. I have emphasized that the word "apocalypse" simply
means "the unveiling" and that we are currently in the midst of a
protracted apocalypse which is ripping the veil off all of
civilization's illusions. The result will be the dissolution of all of
our institutions and the lifestyles of hubris and mindless consumption
that permeate empire. What is also true, in my opinion, is that behind
those is another reality that cries out to emerge in our
consciousness-or, as author, storyteller, and mythologist Michael Meade
has titled his forthcoming book: "the world behind the world."
Characteristic of the culture of empire is its incapacity to appreciate
paradox-a word inextricably connected with "paradise." (Could it be
that in order to ultimately experience "paradise", it is necessary to
appreciate paradox?) But in its typically polarized fashion, empire
says that things are either alive or dead, ending or beginning, and
that both cannot be occurring at the same time. Yet the origin of the
word "end" is instructive because it originally implied not cessation
but "the opposite side". Nature, the ultimate teacher, perpetually
demonstrates the "end" in the changing of the seasons such as we are
currently experiencing, revealing that the falling leaves and withering
grass are dying, but will be reborn in a different form in the
springtime and come to fruition in the resplendent heat of summer. The
world as we have known it is ending, only to regenerate and appear in
some other form which we cannot yet imagine.
While that may
sound gloriously reassuring to the hopeful and pathetically airy-fairy
to the cynical, I emphasize that the metamorphosis of collapse into
rebirth will not occur without enormous suffering. Yet one may ask, if
nothing really comes to an end, why talk about collapse at all? Because
in the real world, as opposed to the polarized delusional world of
civilization, new beginnings cannot occur without endings, and the most
adult response is neither denial nor doom. Rather it is the ability and
willingness to acknowledge collapse on both the transformative level
and on the human level. That is, we must understand its evolutionary
significance but also prepare ourselves for the havoc it will wreak
with our lives-our bodies, emotions, communities, families, economies,
and the ecosystem.
In all transitions, the people who seem to
weather them most effectively are those who can hold on to whatever is
for them timeless and changeless. From concentration camp survivors to
indigenous peoples who have lived through the extermination of their
cultures, connection with that which they experience as eternal has
facilitated their perseverance and survival. In other words, the
capacity for finding meaning in the crumbling of civilization enhances
one's ability to endure and survive it.
The question I would
ask those who assign the label "doomer" to those of us who
irrepressibly speak of and write about collapse is: Can you allow
yourself to become comfortable with paradox? Are your mind and heart
large enough to hold the possibilities of rebirth alongside the reality
of death? Can you withdraw from the drug of "hopeful politics" that
prevents you from looking into the black maw of collapse with all its
inevitable misery and uncertainty, yet at the same time entertain the
potential that it may ultimately actualize for all of life on planet
earth? I can do that; if you can't, then please don't call me a
"doomer".