Under the Green Desk Lamp…
It is good to think of ourselves as guests in this world. For that is surely what we are. We come, and we go. What we leave behind is for the next guests to live with…for a while.
I write a lot about fundamental virtues, and the dignity which is shared by all people and all creeds. For those few who would actively deny that basic human decency, this article is not for you.
To skirt all tangential esoteric questioning, we are here for a while, and then we die. The world goes on.
The situation we are born into is a geographic lottery, and we spend our short time dealing with the choices of thousands of generations of guests before us.
Our actions will affect all those to come.
As such, the assumptions we make and the expectations we hold should hardly be different from our attitude towards being a guest in the house of a friend or colleague.
A guest should not take more than they need, and never without asking. A guest should help out in any way they can. A guest should not cause any undo harm or damage, and a guest should leave things exactly as they find them.
It’s all just good sense, social intelligence, and common respect in the small scale scenario of visiting the home of a friend or colleague, and the grander stage of global interdependency should not obscure this view.
Just as we would not pillage the pantries of our hosts and leave them in want, neither can we allow our society to deny the potential of our skills and resources to nations or people with less. Likewise, just as it would be obscene to deface or destroy a home we are welcomed into, so too is it beneath us to take any action that might ruin this planet we enjoy so briefly, leaving it barren for the generations to come.
To do either would be violence most bestial, with or without gunfire.
It is an easy enough philosophy to nod your head to, but we must now explore the implications. To take no more than what we need, and leave things as they are, many would find themselves no longer the fortunate inheritors of land, wealth, and privilege which the circumstances of their birth have so far afforded. All would need an equal share—and none could be so bold as to demand more. Food, shelter, healthcare, and freedom would be the inherent birthright of all humanity, and the bettering of this shared condition—and its sustainability for future generations—would be the ambition and passion of all.
It’s good to show respect for our host. Our time, our place, and our ability to contribute are irreplaceable commodities which we cannot afford to squander on vanity and entitlement. For a thankless guest soon finds herself with nowhere else to go.
It is good to know these things.
-Brad OH Inc.
The dream of a Utopian society; it has been with us for a long time but despite all our great accomplishments it continues to elude us. Still, it is the ultimate goal we should all strive for. Continue to spread the word. Perhaps if enough people hear…
D.
At Brad OH Inc., we believe that hearing is the lesser part of doing. The question is how to encourage the doing. Better education? Equal access to opportunity? Drones?