"Art Not Crime"

Image by OldOnliner via Flickr

From the blog of Granny1947  I read about her teenage Grandson getting mugged on his way to meet her from her office..that really got me thinking about how we live and just how we learn to accept these nasty happenings as part of modern life. I found the following article which I think says it quite adequately.

Every time we open a newspaper  or turn on the TV  we listen to reports of  muggings ,  kidnappings and rapes, hold-ups of trains and hijackings of planes, adulteration of foodstuffs, drugs and even of poisons.

All this makes one sit up and wonder whether crime is inseparable from civilized life. We appear to live on an earth of well-dressed gangs.

Men have been barbarians much longer than they have been civilized. They are only precariously civilized and deep within them there is the propensity, persistent as the force of gravity to revert to our first natures. Small wonder that under stress and strain the most civilized people are as near barbarism as the most polished steel is to rust. Nations, like metals have only a superficial brilliancy.

Compared with our wonderful progress in physical service and practical applications, our system of government, of administering justice, of national education, and our whole social and moral organization,  we still  remain in a state of barbarism.

The wealth and knowledge and culture of the few do not constitute civilization. Shaw has castigated our superficial civilization in words bitter but true. “Our laws make law impossible; our liberties destroy all freedom; our property is organized robbery; our morality is an impudent hypocrisy; our wisdom is administered by in­experienced or mal-experienced dupes, our power wielded by cowards and weaklings, and our honour false in all its points.”

Crime and violence are inherent in our political and social system. “The poor are always with us” said Christ and the believer reconciled himself to his lot. But the time comes when it is asserted that poverty is man-made and stems from the inequity of the wicked system that obtains. The covert crime begets the overt crime.

The biggest of all crimes that we associate with this civilization is the horror of war. War today is murder on a gigantic scale. At one time it was thought a few hundred corpses would be enough; then came a time when thousands were still too few and today we cannot even count all the dead wherever we look. And the irony is that this large-scale killing, this organized butchery is eulogized in glowing terms, and Victoria Crosses are awarded. Besides, being organized murder, war is also organized loot.

All efforts are directed towards crippling the economy of the enemy. The atom bomb was thrown not on Tokyo, the capital of Japan but on Hiroshima, the industrial hub of that country. The outcome of war in the modern world is un payable debts, repudiations, ruined investments, the utter disorganization of finance, the collapse of the monetary system, the disappearance of the greater part of foreign trade, and, usually, on top of it, revolution from below. Here then is a crime, which does not pay.

The crimes of extreme civilization are probably worse than those of extreme barbarism, because of their refinement, the corruption they presuppose and their superior degree of intellectuality. The barbarian hacked the enemy to pieces; the civilized man tortures him mentally, wins him financially and then, if necessary liquidates him physically. Politicians are past masters in this sordid game. The barbarian was cruel but open-handed, his descendant today is no less cruel but hypocritical.

The barbarian was a beast, with beastly appetites. He was a tiger, an ape, a camel, a goat in turn, whatever suited the occasion. After all it was a struggle for survival, for him. He acted like an automaton. There was no consciousness of crime. The modern civilized man perpetrates crime deliberately. He hoards foodstuffs with a view to selling them at the opportune moment. And in the meantime millions are starved to death. Bengal famine was a glaring example of this sordid game.The civilized man stabs in the dark.His crimes wear a dark cloak.

What do you think? Is this an accurate report of modern living? One of the worst aspects of this modern crime ridden world is that we accept it. We feel lucky that if a mobile phone, an ipod was stolen..well at least we did not get killed. it seems to me that we are grateful for the fact that a stabbing did not take place, a life was not lost.

Day after day we hear reports of another soldier killed in war..at first it was something that we listened to but now it just becomes another statistic. Is this the way we really want to lead our lives>? Have you ever considered just what it will be like when your own children or grandchildren are grown up and have to cope by themselves in this big world.

Of one thing you can be sure…nothing will ever get better..it will only get worse!

That’s all Folks

Stay safe in this rotten world and have my love with you

Patrecia

About misswhiplash

I am 72 years of age. I have been married three times and have 6 children( 3 are mine and 3 belong to Mr Nev ....Between us we have 14 grandchildren and 8 great grandchildren. We live in Bulgaria in a small village. It is agricultural country so many animals. We have 5 dogs , one three legged cat and 2 donkeys. I have had quite a few 'adventures 'in my time and I thought that maybe others would also be interested to read about them.

5 Responses

  1. Bassas Blog says:

    It is a very sad situation Patrecia but nothing will ever get better if we don’t try to change things. The worst crime is knowing something is wrong and doing nothing.

  2. misswhiplash says:

    That is so true Bassas… we can only start with our children, for this is where I think the trouble begins. Let us hope that things will get better but I do not see that it will

  3. barb19 says:

    We certainly live in a very sick world Patrecia, and there is only one person who can fix it – in His own good time.

  4. Bongo says:

    None of us can fix the whole world, but we can make a difference in a small part of it.

  5. Tilly Bud says:

    If we all did our bit, together we could make a huge difference. But there has to be a collective desire for real change. Sadly, we are too selfish.