My son gave me a gift, a book, "A Language Older Than Words" by Derrick Jensen.
Here are a couple of thoughts that deserve sharing.
Many people sharing the same delusion, does not make the delusion true...
We don't stop these atrocities, because we don't talk about them. We don't talk about them, because we don't think about them. We don't think about them, because they're too horrific to comprehend. As trauma expert Judith Herman writes, "The ordinary response to atrocities is to banish them from consciousness. Certain violations of the social compact are too terrible to utter aloud: this the the meaning of the word unspeakable."
Isolation does strange things to a person's mind...Monkeys taken from their mothers at birth, placed alone in stainless-steel chambers, and deprived of contact with other animals, develop irreversible mental illnesses. As one of the experts in this field, Harry Harlow, put it: "sufficiently severe and enduring social isolation reduced these animals to a social-emotional level in which the primary social responsiveness is fear."
Stats from the Third National Incidence Study of Child Abuse and Neglect. This comprehensive report extimated that in 1993, approximately 614,000 American children were physically abused, 300,000 were sexually abused, 532,000 were emotionally abused, 507,000 were physically neglected, and 585,000 were emotionally neglected. 565,000 of these children were killed or seriously injured.
What is the relationship between these numbers and our culturally induced isolation from the natural world and each other, from the social embeddedness in which we evolved?
And a great quote from R.D. Laing:
"Exploitation must not be seen as such. It must be seen as benevolence. Persecution preferably should not need to be invalidated as the figment of a paranoid imagination; it should be experienced as kindness....In order to sustain our amazing images of ourselves as God's gift to the vast majority of the starving human species, we have to interiorize our violence upon ourselves and our children, and to employ the rhetroic of morality to describe this process."