Friday, February 21, 2014

We Are What We Choose To Be


                After reading Ishmael I felt that I had learned hardly anything new. I instead viewed what I already knew in a different light. I knew that humans were destroying the planet, I knew that religions aren't exactly accurate, and I knew that in order to teach someone a new idea that is so ridiculously out there, you have to let them have their own experiences with that idea and let them ponder it for a while. I knew all of that; Ishmael just changed some of my viewpoints on those issues. The one thing the book did teach me to do was to question what I have been taught and to open my eyes to what is happening with our current situation on the planet.
                A perfect example of what I have learned can be compared to the movie “Oblivion.” In this movie, humans are a nearly extinct species after a nuclear war that they had supposedly won against an alien species looking to suck the water from earth. Even though they had won the war, half of the planet had been destroyed. The aliens can be compared to the takers from Ishmael because of their impact on the planet, and the humans can be compared to the leavers because of their little influence on the planet’s resources. Oblivion is also a perfect example of the death of a society idea from what Ishmael said. The way that I interpreted this concept was that when humans are forced to restart civilization, to rebuild and repopulate, they do this as a leaver society. As time goes on and things become more advanced, humans slowly turn into a taker society. This is a repeating cycle that I believe will happen forever just like when it happened when we were cave men. This cycle happened towards the end of the movie WALL-E when the grotesque humans came back to earth to restart and rebuild. The movie Oblivion not only provides an example of this cycle but also tricks you into believing that the humans are actually the aliens and the aliens are the humans. This is done not only as a plot twist but also because it seems realistic that humans would end up destroying the planet. You should always question what you have been taught.



Further exploring my point on takers and leavers, I think that a society will, for the most part, start out as a leaver society and will eventually turn into a taker society when things get to big. We see this today with earth’s exponential growth of the human population. There is a certain point in civilization where we get so advanced that we don’t fully understand what we are actually doing. Nature wasn't made to hold the unreal amount of bodies on this planet. It just doesn't seem natural. We think we know what we are getting into but actually we don’t. This applies to the rapid increase of advancements in technology. Although it may be used for a greater purpose, there is always a negative effect such as cancer or global warming. As civilized people, we think that our society is “different” so we won’t fall like other societies have before us. The truth is it’s only a matter of time until we all hit the ground.