I can just imagine exactly this kind of debate going on in Rome right up to the point that the Huns kicked in the gates. It strikes me that any society that has to start asking itself if it is committing “professional suicide” by ignoring the threat posed by barbarians with a completely alien world view and bent on their destruction is already beyond help. Geopolitical navel-gazing must be the last stage in the evolution of a society before it is too morally ambivalent to defend its own sovereignty. (Or, maybe it results from the unwillingness to do so?)More on this later too...
Let me lay it out for you…
Stage 1: We need a revolution to set us free from tyranny!
Stage 2: Hey, what happened to our colonies?
Stage 3: Oh, yeah. Uh. Colonialism is bad. Yeah. That’s it. So, that must mean any use of military force against anyone anywhere is bad. Right?
Stage 4: Oh gosh, we just need to all be more tolerant of other people. And hey, at least all those imigrants always vote our way. Besides, aren't we all really just immigrants on this big old space ship we call Earth anyway?
Stage 5: Didn't we used to have elections this time of year? Hey, where’d all the Barbies go?
Stage 6: Now repeat after the nice man with the machine gun… “There is one God and Mohamed is his prophet.”
Stage 7: GoTo Stage: 1, repeat as necessary.
Or, the alternative evolution...
Stage 5: Hey, didn't there used to be a couple of big buildings right about here?
Stage 6: Jihad? I've got your Jihad right here baby!
Stage 7: Okay, so we got a litte rough there, but they deserved it.
Stage 8: GoTo Stage 3: repeat as necessary.
So you see, all the terrorists would have had to do to take America out of the equation was leave us alone for another 50 years or so and we would have evolved into sophisticated pro-globalization pacifists all by ourselves. But, nothing sets back political entropy like a good old Pearl Harbor style sucker-punch, eh?
Posted by: Dacotti on September 25, 2003 01:07 PM [NOTE FROM BOB: The address is Dacotti -at- hot mail dot com]
Friday, October 31, 2003
Cycles of Entropy: The Fall of Rome...
I found this on the web a while ago and have been tardy posting it -- well worth the short read: