Parina

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Month: January 2009

CITIES THAT WEREN’T CONSTRUCTED FOR US

We live in towns and cities that weren?t constructed for us. We live in societies, organizations, institutions that weren?t designed for us. We live in conditions and infrastructures construed for others. Others who are now completely alien to us. Others who belonged to an entirely different world. Others who are now completely alien to us, though they may have lived where we still do not that long ago. Though they may for some of us still even remain hazily within living memory. Yet, others who belonged to an entirely other world, regardless of the lapse of time or proximity. Others whom we can?t reach any more, not even in our imagination. Yet their world, their constructions, their values, have caught us in a tight wrench even though they have nothing much to do with how we live any more. Nothing much to do with how we think or feel any more. Nothing much to do with the material evolution we have arrived at, nor even on the plane of ideas and ideals either.
Perhaps a good metaphor for how we live now, all over the so called developed (I do not even dare use the adjective ?civilized? world) and beyond even, are the Le Corbusier high rise apartment houses. Blocks of flats that were not only designed but envisaged as the construct that would bring about a quality of life for the occupants never before imagined. Unfortunately, as is the case with most man inspired and designed utopias, reality turned out to be diametrically different. A high rise urban paradise turned into an urban nightmare, with high rise slums, squalor and criminality rife up unlit staircases and corridors as inhabitants cowered in fright behind locked doors. Which is how we live now.
Our great cities of London, Rome, New York, even smaller ones like Athens, remain on this earth inhabited by creatures struggling hard to squeeze themselves into conditions and dimensions no longer even remotely able to serve the material everyday life, or values, ideologies and aspirations we now have. It?s as if we have grown out of our boots but don?t  have another pair we can fit into, so we cram and squeeze and hobble along, often in terrible pain. But it?s the very world with its constructions and its values or lack thereof, cramming us in so terribly that also prevents us from doing anything about it. Either by way of new constructions or new ideals.

THE PHOENIX PHENOMENON

Some of us may have sneered at the inauguration celebrations. Some of us may have thought they were too kitschy or too Romanesque or too gaudy. Some of us may have thought this pomp and circumstance was even rather outdated. However, one thing that cannot be denied or sneered at is the joy, the sheer joy of the American people all over the United States and beyond, at the inauguration of this new President, Barrack Hussein Obama, of African stock. Who would have imagined this even ten years ago? (Even four!). But the joy and euphoria was hardly entirely due to the ethnic origin, but to the whole change this new President symbolizes. And of course, the hope and expectation that this deep rooted change will go way beyond mere symbolism.

But back to the celebrations. One good friend in the States told me that she thought the best moment of this epic inauguration was when the helicopter took off from Washington taking the big bad Bush away forever. A roar of delight went up from the masses spontaneously, it appears. For all the anti-Americanism, highly enhanced all over the world by the Bush administration, for all the shame many Americans felt when traveling abroad, through this election, the American people have proved themselves. They do not want the things that George W. Bush came to stand for. Things like aggressive, unsanctioned war. Deceit. Infringement of human rights, at home and abroad and so on. To their credit, the first time around the American people did not even vote him. As to his second term, it was the War on Terror and the surrounding deceit and intimidation that terrorized and cowed the electorate into voting him in again. But when you base all your politics on spin, ?Communication? i.e. deceit and bullying, things are not going to last because eventually the lying will be revealed for what it is. Like the WMD never found in Iraq for instance. Bush (or rather Cheney one supposes) forgot Lincoln?s saying, that you cannot fool all of the people all of the time. And perhaps this is the most important message from Obama?s inauguration. A leader cannot lead where his followers will not follow.

The road ahead is tough, difficult and will require sacrifice and hardship. A steep price to pay for the Bush follies. To be fair, not just the Bush follies but also those of the Milton Friedman school of Free Market Economics that has lead to the horrendous economic meltdown we are now living in.

However, one of the many myths of the ancient Greeks was that of the Phoenix, the bird that was born again out of its ashes. When the Obama administration takes severe measures to curtail the arrant irresponsibility and greed of the world of finance, it will be very difficult to argue against such measures. One can only imagine the outcry that would have gone up even only a year ago were someone to even suggest the need to regulate the markets. So that may well be a plus for Obama. In any case he is not only rising up out of the ashes but raising America, and the rest of us too, with him. That at least, is the hope. And we should all fight for it to the best of our abilities. If our leader is trying to lead us out of the mess and establish a greater degree of fairness and equality, however painful things may feel at the beginning, we should follow him.

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