Disjointed Happiness

We live in a Factual Fiction, built on false and questionable assertions, guided by intentional fiction, and ruled by a vocal majority. We should (and I believe we could) live in the pursuit of Beauty-Truth-Wisdom-Justice, built on substantiated, tangible fact, guided by expert opinion, and ruled by an actual majority. But we like Factual Fiction. It gives one something to live for, a sense of control, purpose, meaning, something to talk about. We don’t like the pursuit of Beauty-Truth-Wisdom-Justice not only because its Ideal is unattainable, but mostly because its pursuit is discouraged, unrewarded, and often punished.

A Factual Fiction from a false or questionable premise may come from the following (often entangled, mixed, melded for strength and support):

  • Uninformed Conjecture.
  • Hearsay.
  • Anecdotal Evidence.
  • Political Rhetoric.
  • Fear.
  • Belief.
  • Doctrine.
  • Tradition.
  • Entitled Privilege.

As a human individual I am compelled to create a number of factual fictions to engage with others and to function in my day-to-day existence. In this process though, I should also recognize that these fictions are necessities residing outside of my essence that strives for Beauty-Truth-Wisdom-Justice. But as a capitalist culture, as a country, we have been forced to internalize Factual Fiction thus blotting out / smothering our essential reality. And we don’t appear to understand that by doing so we have lost our ability to collectively improve, make things better, do Good.

As a capitalist culture, as a country, we have replaced essence with substance; we have turned ourselves so much outside-in we can no longer feel what matters.

In a Factual Fiction unfounded judgements are required to justify its intrinsic injustice. This is relevant in two ways:

  1. choosing one Factual Fiction over another, and
  2. avoiding / ignoring substantiated, tangible fact and expert opinion.

Both relevancies allow one to remain loyal to their chosen Factual Fiction and to perpetuate the divisiveness necessary to maintain the underlying Intentional Fiction, widen gaps, and strengthen the vocal majority.

How do you tell someone who makes more money than you, is more powerful than you, and who believes they are smarter than you, that they are stupid; or even just ignorant. When I first wrote the preceding sentence I thought I would have to temper it. But no. Collectively we are stupid and individually too many of us have allowed this collective stupidity to turn us outside-in; to choose to live this really, really, really, really stupid Factual Fiction that is our capitalist culture – our country.

This week, in a discussion about money, someone said to me , “I don’t understand your mindset.” Perhaps that is because my thoughts don’t stem from the false premises and false promises of a capitalist culture.

And now this week I am once again reading about heedless, needless gun violence that this time erupted in my home state. I am not proud to be a Missourian. The lack of any effort by the state of Missouri, by the United States of America, to curb the proliferation of such easily attainable weapons is a head-shaking, heartbreaking stupidity; a Factual Fiction substantiated and strengthened by a capitalist culture. Once again there will be an uproar, political rhetoric, fear countered by tradition, and once again nothing will happen. We will remain mired in our collective stupidity.

Paragraphs above feel a bit disjointed this week, but then so do I.

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