The recent New Yorker
article this extrapolation emanates from was blandly entitled, “How
Civilization Started”, though it made a provocative comeback with the subtitle,
“Was It Even A Good Idea?”
On second thought, maybe it wasn’t that wonderful. I
mean, those notorious “Question ‘Billboards’” on the local news, like:
“Big tornado – Is it headed our way?”
They withhold that worrisome tidbit till the end of the
broadcast, making us sit through the sports, the weather, the returned puppy story
and the inane banter. Then finally, they
answer the question, “Big tornado – Is it headed our way?”:
“No.”
Of course,
“No.” If there was an actual big tornado
heading their way, they wouldn’t pose it as a mere, speculative query, they’d
say, “Get in the basement or you’ll wind up in Oz!”
Still, in the context of civilization, “Was it even a good
idea?” is an admittedly tantalizing enticement, even if the inevitable answer is
“Yes.”
Or is it?
Oh, no. Now, I’m doing it.
Oh, man! I am so impressionable.
Anyway (and I hope this is worthwhile)…
The gist of the New
Yorker article is that when society morphed from a hunting and gathering
society – the latter pursuit relegated to “Second Position” because it’s… “gathering” – anyway, when hunting (and
gathering) transformed into “Planting and Cultivating”, we generally saw this as
an anthropological “upgrade.”
But is it? Meaning, “Have we mistakenly gotten it
backwards, and the so-called “primitive” society was actually the superior one?”)
There is this song in the musical Oliver! entitled “Reviewing the Situation”, in which the miscreant
Fagin contemplates abandoning his nefarious proclivities. In one verse, considering one change in his larcenous lifestyle, Fagin
ponders the possibility of marriage.
Ultimately, however, his connubial ruminations lead to a strategic
reversal.
The verse goes like this:
“And a wife would cook and sew for me
And come for me, and go for me
And go for me, and nag
and me
The finger she will
wag at me
The money she will
take from me
A misery she’ll make from me…
I think I’d better
think it out again.”
You see what he did there?
Upon further examination, the prospect of “marital bliss” becomes
substantially less appealing than it was original considered.
That is, analogously, what happened with society, the New Yorker article asserts, triggering
the provocative question about civilization:
“Was it even a good idea?”
To which, their researched reaction, mirroring Fagin’s, is:
“Yes. But…”
And here’s why.
Hunters (and gatherers) exhibit a tripartite cultural
arrangement:
“We find it. We bring
it home. We eat it.”
Next day – they do exactly the same thing.
By contrast, the “more advanced”, subsequent agricultural societies:
“We plant it. We grow
it. We form settled communities. We elect representatives to administer those
communities. They impose taxes – crops
and property being more assessingly visible than digested food already in
hunter-(gatherers’) tummies – the tax revenues providing for roads, bridges, universal
health care if it’s not here, but they
also potentially open the door to dictatorial dominance, corruption,
exploitation, and an accelerating unequal distribution of wealth. Among other
unwelcome consequences.”
“We find it. We bring
it home. We eat it.”
You see the difference?
The hunter-(gatherers’) approach is simpler, less
corruptible and more inherently equitable, thus, as with the fleeing “Ringo”
and “Dallas” in Stagecoach, described
by the drunk doctor, sparing them “…from the blessings of civilization.”
Let’s focus on one element.
(Because otherwise, I have to keep writing and miss lunch and my work inevitably
turns grumpy because I’m hungry.)
The Hunter-(Gatherer) Credo:
“We find it. We bring
it home. We eat it.”
The Result:
Full bellies, and no surplus. Everyone eats everything, and everything is
gone. Leaving nothing to hoard. Nothing to brag about. Nothing to produce rising material
inequities. Nothing to tax, or tax evade.
The hunter-(gatherers) were effectively liberated from those nasty shenanigans.
PREHISTORIC HUNTER: “Once, I killed three animals, figuring to
take a couple of days off from hunting and eat the two other animals the next day and the day after that. Hey! Don’t mock me; I’m a Neanderthal with the grip of a gorilla. But, yeah.
The next day comes, I had to throw the two other dead animals out because
they literally stunk up the cave. That
sure showed me:
“You cannot ‘bank’ dead animals.”
For obvious practical reasons – which became their societal
M.O – every day, the hunter-(gatherers) acquired only what they required.
And then they stopped.
No dead meat savings accounts. (Nor dead meat, secreted in mattresses.) No discretionary dead meat invested in the stock
market. No dead meat, buried in overseas
accounts, to avoid taxes.
SWISS BANKER: “This vault – forgive me – has a detectable
aroma. And I do not mean of Swiss chocolate!”
Because they now could,
agricultural society – and, subsequently, industrial
society – sufficiently provided for their personal needs. But then, they voraciously kept going, jettisoning
the leveling philosophy of “enough.” People
now accumulated for the sake of “accumulating” itself, amassing, as it were, more meat than they could consume in
a thousand lifetimes.
And they kept on amassing.
PREHISTORIC HUNTER: “I don’t get that. Why don’t they stop when they have enough and
take it easy in their caves?”
An interesting question.
From an ancestor whose brain was purported smaller than our
own.
Was “civilization”
a good idea?
Yes. But keep an eye
on the bad stuff.
Because it is really, really bad.
I don’t know,
Maybe, like the musically deliberating Fagin,
We ought to (seriously, wisely and quickly) think it out
again.
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