Ivo Skoric on Sat, 8 Sep 2001 22:11:51 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> It's the law!-Or is it the money? |
I am not an idealist, God forbid, what made you think so? Also, knowing a lot pf people on both sides of Atlantic, I am not so sure if just a relative few share my beliefs, but if it is so, it does not prove them wrong. The majority of people once believed that the earth is flat. Today we all know that the earth is not flat - yet majority of us still acts as if it is. I do not remember speculating that I would act in a life threatening situation in a way which is not self defensive. Survival instinct is something that comes wired into our hardware, and while humans can to extent over-ride those instructions, only in very rare occassions any human being would choose to do so in a life threatening situation. I have no reasons to believe that I would do so. I pledged my readiness to accept risks that may be life threatening, but I did not say I would resign myself to them. I would fight as good as I can. We all act within the framework - as if it would be possible to act out of it. But not all of us are acting in a way to change the framework. Actually, the majority is acting in a way to re-enforce the existing framework. And the rest are out of the mainstream, i.e. idealistic. I essentially try to act the way I believe. It is sometimes a 'collateral damage' that others feel criticized by my beliefs or lifestyle. Declaring the issues of drinking age and speed limits silly, means to decide not to devote any resources to change those laws. Of course, I agree that I can hardly present those two issues as seriously threatening to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. Not only because one of it (the drinking age) is and can only be infracted by adolescents and the other only by the people who drive, but because neither are treated as felonies. But they are indeed annoyances uneccessary in the land of the free. I used them mostly as parables. Because I am not a racial minority, my chances to land in a real prison are many times too low for me to be able to explore the issues that really threaten the fabric of American justice, social peace and democracy. On the other hand - teenagers in Texas can end up in jail if they were caught drinking for the third time. And drivers around the country can lose their licenses, despite their families rely on the income that depends on their driving, and despite they did not actually comit any crime, but merely broke a 'silly' law. There are other issues that I didn't mention: three strikes you are out that put thousands of non-violent petty criminals in jails, mandatory sentences that took away the discretion of the judges in sentencing and put prosecutors in charge of justice, zero- tolerance that crowded prisons with ordinary youth, found in possession of a substance legal in many civilized Western democracies. Should I go further? The immigration laws that threat asylum seekers as guilty until proven innocent? The landlord-tenant laws that give disproportionatelly more rights to landlords? The labor laws that give disproportionatelly more rights to employees in the market of ever less unionized labor force? The laws that are discretely steered in a way to put more racial minorities and/or low income persons in prison - like the Connecticut law that provides for a mandatory sentences for people found in possession of illegal substances that live in public housing projects? You are an attorney in Louisiana, you should be familiar with those things. A friend of mine just finished a documentary about Louisiana prisons for TLC. And you are not right that I am seeking license, not freedom. I am seeking freedom, not license. In freedom, licensing is un- neccessary. But if a society starts from a premise that some things simply cannot be left free, then license is neccessary. I do not start from that premise. If we take into account that in sixties Kennedy's were shot because of their political activity, and today they die by hitting a tree while skiing or driving their sport planes into the ocean, then you may be onto something with the James Crotty mockery of Nietzsche on Oprah (the mock Nietzsche was right about Oprah's show, I think). I also had a chance to die for a 'good cause', perhaps, should I have stayed in former Yugoslavia. In the U.S. I'd have to risk my life snowboarding over some steep avalanche terrain. This sounds more interesting, though, than to resign to the less thrilling alternatives that the mock Oprah offers (and they sound kind of like the opening of The Fight Club, I am sure Crotty is a fan). I am utterly confused with his examples of genuine heroism - Caesar, Napoleon and Nietzsche?! Caesar and Napoleon were unscrupulous conquerors and tyrants. Under present world standards they would both be tried for war crimes and crimes against humanity, including genocide. One was killed by his peers and the other was imprisoned for life by his enemies. In their wake they left millions of people dead, displaced and disinherited. Yet the history remembers them only as great leaders. Ok, Napoleon gave us metric system and canned food. But, what's wrong with Hitler, then? He gave us the autobahn! Nietzsche on the other hand kind of does not fit with Napoleon and Ceasar in the 'heroes' cathegory. Guy was a teacher of classical languages, what on earth could he change? Plus, he had a really nasty, non-idealist, very mainstream sister that managed to obtain a really bad name for him and his most enticing writings. Then, if you like Nietzsche's philosophy, you should have some simpathy for my view of the over-regulated U.S. mainstream existence. It is putting a heavy toll on that bridge that we are, between what we used to be and what we ought to become. Sincerely, Ivo Skoric Ivo Skoric 1773 Lexington Ave New York NY 10029 212.369.9197 ivo@balkansnet.org http://balkansnet.org _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold