By John W. Whitehead
December 13, 2016
“I think there must be something wrong with me,
Linus. Christmas is coming, but I’m not happy. I don’t feel the way I’m
supposed to feel.” ― Charlie Brown, A Charlie Brown Christmas
I keep waiting to encounter the “kind, forgiving,
charitable, pleasant” Christmastime environment that Charles Dickens describes
in A Christmas Carol: “when men and women seem by one consent
to open their shut-up hearts freely, and to think of people below them as if
they really were fellow-passengers to the grave, and not another race of
creatures bound on other journeys.”
Instead, every time I read a news headline or flip
on the television or open up an email, I run headlong into people consumed with
back-biting, partisan politics, sniping, toxic hate, meanness, unfriending and
materialism.
How is it that despite all of the blessings and
advantages we in the United States possess, as a nation we continue to major in
minors, prioritizing politics and profit margins over decency and
human-kindness?
We’ve been operating in this topsy-turvy,
inside-out, upside-down state of being for too long now, but the absence of
goodwill, charity and human kindness is especially apparent now, with Christmas
just around the corner when, as Charles Dickens notes, “Want is keenly felt,
and Abundance rejoices.”
For instance, Americans spent an estimated $6.9 billion dollars on federal
elections in 2016. And what do we have to show for it?
More of the same. The halls of Congress and the White House are as polluted as
ever.
The country’s endless wars, foreign occupations and
targeted drone killings have stretched our military thin, robbed us of
resources needed to shore up our infrastructure, and left us vulnerable to
blowback, and yet the U.S. government has committed close to $6 trillion to advance wars in the
Middle East and prop up the military industrial complex.
Pork barrel legislation, waste, corruption and
general mismanagement have also contributed to the government’s
ballooning $20 trillion debt.
Yet the politicians continue to find ways steal from those who can least afford
it, while leading lives of luxury and excess.
To sum things up, Americans have shelled out
trillions of dollars of hard-earned tax dollars on political circuses, war
machines and graft that fed no one, clothed no one, sheltered no one, and did
not in any way shift the balance of power in the country between the haves (the
oligarchic elite that runs Washington DC) and the have nots (the millions of
taxpayers whose needs are not being heard or represented, and who must labor to
pay for the corruption, excesses and graft of the power elite).
When will we ever learn?
Before you know it, Christmas will be a distant
memory and we’ll be back to our regularly scheduled programming of politics,
war, violence, materialism and mayhem.
There may not be much we can do to avoid the dismal
reality of the police state in the long term—not so long as the powers-that-be
continue to call the shots and allow profit margins to take precedence over the
needs of people—but in the short term, there are things we can all do right now
to make this world (or at least our small corners of it) just a little bit
kinder, a little less hostile and a lot more helpful to those in need.
If we want it badly enough, that is.
As John Lennon reminded us, “War is over, if you
want it.”
Those last four words are key: “if you want it.”
What we must ask ourselves is how badly do we really want peace, a world
without hatred and war, and an end to hunger and disease? As Lennon pointed
out, “If everyone demanded peace instead of another television set, then
there’d be peace.”
No matter what one’s budget, religion, or political
persuasion, here are a few things we can do right now to beat the police state
blues and recapture the true spirit of Christmas.
Tone down the partisan rhetoric, the “us” vs.
“them” mentality. Politicians frequently perpetuate a “good”
versus “evil,” “us” versus “them” rhetoric which pits citizen against citizen
and allows the politicians to advance their personal, political agendas.
Instead of wasting time and resources on political infighting, which gets us
nowhere, it’s time Americans learned to work together to solve the problems
before us. The best place to start is in your own communities, neighbor to
neighbor.
Minimize the technology and tune into what’s
happening in your family, in your community and your world. Ration
your screen time. Minimize your exposure to social media. Trade virtual
communities for real ones. Get involved with a nonprofit that works in your
community. Greet your neighbors. Make time for family meals. Spend time talking
to each other instead of at each other. Whatever you do, reduce your intake of
mindless television and entertainment news. The only reality programming worth
taking notice of is the one playing in your home and community.
Show compassion to those in need, be kind to those
around you, forgive those who have wronged you, and teach your children to do
the same. Increasingly, people seem to be forgetting
their p’s and q’s—basic manners that were drilled into older generations. I’m
talking about simple things like holding a door open for someone, helping
someone stranded on the side of the road, and saying “please” and “thank you”
to those who do you a service—whether it be to the teenager bagging your
groceries or the family member who just passed the potatoes.
Talk less, listen more. Take less, and give more. If
people spent less time dwelling on and attending to their own needs and more
time trying to help and understand those around them, many of the problems we
currently face could be eliminated. Instead of counting your many complaints,
count your blessings and pay them forward. Here’s where I’ll put in a plug
for The Rutherford Institute, which is one of the
most hard-working, ethical and selfless organizations out there trying to make
this sorry little world a better place. If the spirit of giving moves you, take
a moment to send some love their way. They’re doing a lot with very little, and
they can use all the help they can get.
Stop being a hater. Increasingly, we as
a society have come to reflect the hostility at work in the world at large.
This is so even in such a virtual microcosm as Facebook, where “unfriending”
those with whom you might disagree has become commonplace. How can we ever hope
to curb the hatred and animosity that have spurred global terrorism over the
past few decades if we can’t even forgive the human failings of those in our
immediate circles?
Learn tolerance in the true sense of the word.
There’s no need to legislate tolerance through hate crime legislation and other
politically correct mechanisms of compliance. True tolerance stems from a basic
respect for one’s fellow man or woman. And it should be taught to children from
the time they can understand right from wrong.
Value your family. The family, such
that it is, is already in great disrepair, torn apart by divorce, infidelity,
overscheduling, overwork, materialism, and an absence of spirituality. Despite
the billions we spend on childcare, toys, clothes, private lessons, etc., a
concern for our children no longer seems to be a prime factor in how we live
our lives. And now we are beginning to see the blowback from collapsing
familial relationships. Indeed, more and more, I hear about young people
refusing to talk to their parents, grandparents being denied access to their
grandchildren, and older individuals left to molder away in nursing homes. Yet
without the family, the true building block of our nation, there can be no
freedom.
Feed the hungry, shelter the homeless and comfort
the lonely and broken-hearted. Volunteer at a soup
kitchen. Take part in local food drives. Take a meal to a needy family. “Adopt”
an elderly person at a nursing home. Support the creation of local homeless
shelters in your community. Urge your churches, synagogues and mosques to act
as rotating thermal shelters for the homeless during the cold winter months.
Jesus—the reason for the season, as they say—is quoted in the Book of Matthew
as cautioning his followers, “Whatever you did for the least of these, you did
for me.” In other words, put your faith into action and help those in need.
Give peace a chance. The
military industrial complex has a lot to gain financially so long as America
continues to wage its wars at home and abroad, but you can be sure that the
American people will lose everything unless we find some way to give peace a
chance.
We’re all in the same boat together. It’s
been a toxic year full of hateful rhetoric demonizing those with whom one might
disagree politically, racially, religiously, culturally, economically, morally,
etc. These differences won’t matter in the long run. At a certain level, we’re
all the same. We’re all in the same boat together. Indeed, as I point out in my
book Battlefield America: The War on the
American People, unless we do something to stop it the oppression
and injustice of the police state now—whether it takes the form of shootings,
surveillance, fines, asset forfeiture, prison terms, roadside searches, and so
on—we will all suffer the same deadly fate eventually.
As Dickens reminds us, it’s never too late to make
things right in the world and try to be better people and, most importantly of
all, pay your blessings forward.
Whether you do it as the Grinch did by reaching out
to people with whom you don’t see eye to eye and building bridges of
friendship, or as Scrooge did, by repenting of his greed, selfishness and bah
humbuggery and looking out for those in need, the point, my friends, is to do
it now before it’s too late, not just at Christmastime, but always.
WC: 1735
ABOUT JOHN W. WHITEHEAD
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