Category Archives: slavery

Should We Condemn the Past? – History Lesson #4

1, 2, and 3 are past, so that makes this day #4 of History Lesson Week.

Should we condemn the past? History Lesson #4

 

INFURIATIONS
This sentiment, ‘every past is worth condemning’, probably infuriates you as it did me when I first read it.  I am often the one in arguments about history to defend the past era and the decisions made then.  I don’t mean I approve of them, obviously I would not make many of the same decisions now.  But that’s the point; I am in the present, not the past.  Just as you have to take into consideration the age and mental capacity of your child when you react to what they say and do, you must do the same for the people of the past.  They knew what they knew and as a result they said and did thing based on that knowledge, not based on our knowledge.  So, I typically am against condemning the past, even if we now can say we don’t approve of the actions they took.

But after reading this simple sentence over a number of times I am starting to see the value in it.  By condemning the past and how they acted we are saying that we have learned, we have grown, we have gone beyond their understanding.  That of course can be a two-edged sword. Not all knowledge from the past is wrong and often we find ourselves as a society moving back to past practices because we have found that our ‘progress’ really wasn’t so progressive.  But plenty of knowledge from that past is worth condemning.

RATIONALIZATIONS
We don’t need to reexamine if slavery is something we should bring back. It has been condemned as wrong and we will not return to it.  We don’t need to investigate if the subjugation of women is something we want to reinstitute.  We know they are equal to the male of the species in every way and we are not going to return to the days of them being condemned to a lesser life.  We condemn that attitude and any and all rationalizations, however valid they may have seemed at some point in the past.  We know now they are not valid and we will not let them be used again.

THE PAST AS PRESENT
The last point about women brings us to a dilemma.  The past isn’t always in the past.  We have subjugation of women going on all over the globe as I write this today.  They are not allowed to vote, to drive, to own property, to have their own money, to participate as an equal member of society. The societies that are perpetrating this are still using the same arguments we once used not so long ago (don’t forget, less than 100 years ago women did not have the right to vote in the USA).

We can also find it with us today in the US and other supposedly enlightened western countries.  You don’t have to go much farther than the headlines of the last week over Rush Limbaugh’s disgusting statements about one woman in particular (and be inference virtually all women in the US) to know we still have a long way to go to move past some of those same rationalizations we thought we had left behind.

 

Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman of The Napkin Dad Daily

Quote by Friedrich Nietzsche, 1844-1900, German philosopher

 

>The Art of Being a Slave

>

Tis a week of Ancient Philosophers it is.  Let’s start with Diogenes, shall we?

Diogenes was a slave early in his life.  The story goes that when he was on the auction block he pointed to his future owner in the crowd and said “Sell me to that man.  He needs a master.”  He did get sold to that man and went on to become a well known bad boy philosopher in Athens.  


The reason I chose this quote though is not about real slaves and owners, it’s about how to master those traits that enslave you.  You can hope to get rid of a trait or a habit, and that is best in many cases such as cigarettes and alcohol.  But if we are honest with ourselves we are not going to get rid of all our traits and habits, even the bad ones.  We are going to live with them.  The key is figuring out how to master them and bend them away from negativity and destruction.


Let’s talk eating for example.  You can’t not eat. You can’t take it out of your life. You have no option but to let it control you, or you control it.  If you were a slave (to the master named food) and you wanted to actually become the master of that master how would you go about it? Would you do as Diogenes did and announce to the world that you were going to be the master? Or would you be more subtle and slowly, but with strong intent, design the life of that master in such a way that you controlled everything he did, everywhere he went, everyone he saw.


Think of it that way and perhaps it will give you a new perspective. And here is the best part.  Your master, be it food or something else, is actually pretty dumb.  It will allow you to take control of it if you have the will to do so.  It’s not up to food, it’s up to you.


Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman of The Napkin Dad Daily


Quote by Diogenes, 404 BCE – 323 BCE, Greek philosopher.  Famous for the story where he went looking for one honest man in Athens and couldn’t find one, even with a lamp in broad daylight.  Thanks to one of my favorite quote book authors for this info.  James Geary, author of ‘Geary’s Guide to the World’s Great Aphorists’.

>All My Slavery

>I am not talking about REAL physical slavery, that is evil with a capital EVIL and is not the slave’s choice.

I am talking about the hamburger, the cloud, the plane, the sun and anything else you can get yourself emotionally, psychologically, physically, chemically addicted to. We are our habits, so choose them wisely.

Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman of The Napkin Dad Daily

Quote by Fulvio Fiori, 1955 – not dead yet, Italian author, director, actor
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