[Neurons] 2021 Neurons #51 HISTORY IS FOREVER OR IS IT?

Michael Hall meta at acsol.net
Thu Aug 12 20:44:36 EDT 2021


From: L. Michael Hall

2021 Neurons #51

August 13, 2021

How Self-Actualization 

Can Save Politics #8

 

       HISTORY IS FOREVER OR IS IT?

 

How should we think about what someone did in the past?  Is it truly past or
is it still alive?  Obvious, someone, or many some ones, did something, good
or bad, and it influenced those who were born afterwards.  Now once upon a
time in human history, when a country conquered another country, they would
take the people defeated and turned them into slaves and make them work for
them.  From ancient Egyptians to Romans to European colonizing countries, it
was a developmental stage that our ancestors went through.  It was an aspect
of man's inhumanity to man.

 

Fast forward several centuries, and we learned better.  Knowledge grow,
science developed, mankind learned how to test and validate ideas and as we
learned better, we developed better ideas - democracy, equality of persons,
rule of law, balance of powers, etc.  As we learned, we became more
conscious and more conscientious about our actions.  Legislators forbid the
slave industry almost from the beginning of this country, Lincoln freed the
slaves, the Civil Rights movement inspired and motivated new legislation to
move us step by step toward "a more perfect union."

 

But with Critical Race Theory (CRT) there is a really bad idea about
history.  Whatever bad things that happened in history continue today and
cannot be undone except by total Revolution.  They fail to see and
appreciate the continuous learning and development making us a more
color-blind nation.  In fact, the promoters of CRT scoff at Martin Luther
King's idea of color-blind.  Instead they push a racist ideology just as a
reversed racial ideology was pushed upon their great, great, great
grandparents.  Of course, it was not pushed on them personally, they were
not around!   CRT has simply reversed the racism and are trying to do in
kind what has been done a hundred years ago.

 

The really bad idea is that "the past is still alive."  That's also a stupid
idea.  It leads to thinking that what happened in 1619 or what happened in
1860 or the 1930s is still a problem that needs to be solved today.  A much
better idea is that "what happened in the past is past.  It is done and over
with."  Certainly consequences from the past may continue, and if so, then
if there is something happening today that's hurtful, or ugly, or
de-humanizing, then we need to address that as a problem to be solved.   But
the problem we're solving is not the past, or in the past, it is in the
present- here and now.

 

Those who focus on the past and complain about the injustices and cruelties
of the past are also the very ones who disdain all of the progress that we
have made over the centuries toward a more perfect union.  It was in the
19th century that the great majority of nations outlawed slavery.  In the
US, we fought a bloody Civil War to end slavery.  After that it still took
the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s to bring about
groundbreaking legal changes that made equality the law of the land.  It
took the visionary leadership of Martin Luther King Jr. to change the focus
from "the color of one's skin" to "the one's character."

 

The past is not forever and it is certainly no longer present.  It is past.
That's why we call it the past.  It is done and gone.  The best idea is to
live today and focus on what we can do today that will make for a brighter
future. 

 

 

 




 

 

L. Michael Hall, Ph.D., Executive Director 

Neuro-Semantics 

P.O. Box 8

Clifton, CO. 81520 USA                             

               1 970-523-7877 

132607 NeuroSemantics Executive Learning Front Cover

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://pairlist8.pair.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20210812/a194b3ec/attachment-0001.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 51262 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <https://pairlist8.pair.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20210812/a194b3ec/attachment-0001.jpg>


More information about the Neurons mailing list