Thursday, 4 June 2020

A Truth Always Worth Stating...




Here are a few bullet-pointed thoughts:

* Where there is racism in the world, we should do all we can to eradicate it.

* But too many people look for racism and claim its existence when it is not occurring.

* Where there is unfair discrimination in the world, we should do all we can to challenge it.

* But too many people look for unfair discrimination and claim its existence when it is not occurring.

* Where there is unjust inequality in the world, we should strive to make things better.

* But too many people look for unjust inequality and claim its existence when it is not occurring.

And herein lies the trouble: most people want to make the world a better place – but to do this with maximum effect you have to seek the truth, employ reason, and have a balanced perspective on reality. If not-real real instances of racism, unfair discrimination and unjust inequality are being mixed in with real instances, then it's harder to do a good job of eradicating the genuinely bad elements in society. A detective is going to find it harder to solve real murders if large swathes of the population play dead.

Aristotle, very likely influenced by Aesop's famous fable of the boy who cried wolf, popularised the maxim that when habitual liars do actually speak the truth they are not believed. This is why the offence-seeking social justice warriors, the snowflakes, the raving lefties, the maladjusted environmentalists and all manner of paranoid, affronted alarmists do themselves no favours when they continue to perpetuate myths and hostilities - like the bogus racism they see as a tool to advance their identity politics, the mythological unfair gender pay gap, the toxic victim-mentality, the misandry, the fabricated complaints about inequality and the absurd socialist agenda to further their cause (see here and here for more about the damage this does).

Because if, by chance, they do stumble upon a genuine untruth or a real injustice that requires action, they will probably find themselves falling victim to the 'cry wolf' scenario where too few people take them seriously enough on these matters. That's why it is essential at all times to earnestly seek the facts and truths, and not be taken in by convenient nonsense! It will make people trust you less on the things you may be right about - and people will always be doubtful around you, never being sure if they can trust your judgements.

Here is the biggest set of home truths the world will always need - it's a tough but necessary reality check:

1) We as individuals are to blame for most of our problems.

2) We can fix all the problems for which we are to blame by making incremental improvements.

3) There are some bad situations for which we are not to blame.

3) We can make all the bad situations for which we are not to blame better by making incremental improvements.

4) We blame others most of the time for things we are unwilling to fix ourselves by making those incremental improvements.

5) We do this because displacement, transference, denial and projection make an easier path of least resistance than the effort of making those incremental improvements.

6) We should all have sympathy with one another, and help each other, because incremental improvements are easier if we feel supported and valued.

7) Those incremental improvements are roughly this: seeking the truth, embracing facts, improving our attitude towards other people and things, being committed to fixing the faults within our inner-machinery.

Some people may find number 1 difficult to swallow, but I think that's because society has been spoon fed a rather anodyne narrative about the merits of personal responsibility, achievement, diversity of talent and individual strengths, preferring instead a fabricated equality and a counterfactual persuasion that there is always someone else to blame for why our lives aren't going as well and aren't as successful as other people's.

The most valuable truth any of us can learn about personal responsibility and having a fulfilled life is that proper motivation to make positive incremental improvements really will make life better, if we'll only try with determination for our own betterment, and keep persevering. This will be an easier journey for some people than others - of course that's always going to be true - but what is the alternative except for each individual to do the best they can with the talents, experience, background and raw material they've been afforded?

So here's the rule, and it's replete in Biblical wisdom: Only we as individuals can ultimately make our lives better (see James 4:17 and Galatians 6:7-9). Sure we can have help, and positive circumstances that aid our journey - but ultimately we have to take the lead in desiring better for ourselves, and if we do, we'll start to see those problems around us becoming more manageable. Just as we can't write a good novel without a good story, we can't create a good life without a good inward effort to make positive changes and fix the faults within our inner-machinery.

Here's another rule that's as old as scripture; small changes will beget bigger changes - if you start small, even small things might seem hard - but if you keep making small changes for the better, you'll get to the stage where it isn't that difficult to make big positive changes. That's because compound interest is one of the most powerful forces in the world (that is, interest on interest where P (1+(r/n))^nt). How that translates here is that if you try to be better you will be able to become even better still in a way that resembles the formula for compound interest (see also Matthew 13:12 - “Whoever has will be given more, and they will have an abundance”).

Let’s have a bit of fun to show how compound interest can increase the abundance of one’s abundance. Let's take marriage as an example - marriage is hard, and it's really difficult to be a great husband or wife. And while it’s not easy to monetarise qualities in a marriage (it’s not as hard as you think either) let’s say that in order to be spiritually mature enough for marriage you have to be £1000 worth of amazing. Two beloveds can marry if they are both worth £1000 each. A marriage that begins with a £2000 joint account balance of amazingness should then look to become even more amazing together - in how they bless others and each other, and in how their love grows and deepens - to add interest to the interest they are accumulating.

Let’s give some calculations. Suppose the beginning marriage balance is £2000, and the couple can manage a weekly addition of amazingness of just £1 each (£2 total). In other words, each beloved only has to become more amazing at a rate of 1/2000th every week for the rest of their life, making small improvements to become better beloveds. In 50 years, with a weekly addition of amazingness of just £1 each, with an annual interest rate of 10% (which is roughly equivalent to improving yourselves by just 1/10th of your total amazingness each year), and an annual compounding interval (the interval your savings will compound at), your marital value after 50 years will be £360,881. If you can manage a 15% annual interest (improving yourselves by just over 1/6th of your total amazingness each year) then your marital value after 50 years will be a staggering £2.9 million. If you add another 5% to the annual interest rate, and can manage 20%, your value after 50 years will shoot up to an astounding £23.3 million.

While the figures are partly a bit of fun to show how interest on interest can accumulate - there is an important analogue in relation to becoming better people: the more improvements we make - in our thinking, in our truthseeking, in our attitude towards others, in our diligence - the better still we can become, giving ourselves and those around a more enriching and fulfilling life. That truth will always be true, irrespective of what is going on around us - it is an ineluctable law of being flawed humans.





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