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Sheeple and Underdog PsychologyLet's inspire the world
Our technology allows a small number of people to provide an entire
nation with food. The majority of us can spend our time on other tasks,
such as building beautiful cities, developing even more technology, and
studying ourselves to understand how food and chemicals affect our health.
Visitors to America should be impressed by our cities, our schools, our legal system, our economy, and even our government leaders. We should be inspiring other nations to become more like us. We should be setting an example for other nations to follow. Unfortunately, the only American cities that are beautiful and where
people are healthy and happy are in the imagination of artists, such as
the man who created the drawing above.
Some people blame America's problems on incompetent or dishonest government officials, corporate executives, and school officials. Other people blame America's problems on Republicans, Democrats, Mexicans, Christian Fundamentalists, Jews, blacks, or Satan. Regardless of who you blame America's problems on, the dilemma nobody
wants to face is, why don't we improve our situation? Why do we
continue to suffer from deteriorating trains, traffic problems, crime,
chaos, and wars?
Our natural tendency is to trust authorityOne reason we resist improving our world is that we resist facing the possibility that our leaders are corrupt or incompetent. Our natural tendency is to trust people in positions of authority; to assume they are protecting us and providing guidance to us.Children offer the most extreme example of this. The natural tendency of a child is to assume his parents are wonderful people. A child will trust his life with his parents, and he will resist accusations that his parents are bad people. This tendency to trust authority persists even in adults. In fact, some people have noticed that simply by pretending that they are important they can get people to regard them as an authority. People who are promoted to management positions are sometimes advised by other managers to put on an aura of being a leader. The reason is simply because we don't judge a leader by his ability to lead. Rather, like an animal, and like a child, we judge a leader by his visual appearance, posture, tone of voice, and -- most important -- according to whether other people consider him to be a leader. Our tendency to trust authority is allowing mentally incompetent people
to remain as leaders in government, universities, business, and news reporting.
We must be forced to do something unnaturalHumans and animals resist doing things that are unnatural for us. For example, horses resist wearing saddles. This is a sign that carrying objects on their back is unnatural for them. However, a long time ago somebody discovered that by forcing a horse to wear a saddle, it will become accustomed to it. We refer to this process as "saddle breaking" the horse.Homosexuality is also unnatural for most of us. However, judging by
the accusations of Kay Griggs (at The same concept applies to authority. Our natural tendency is to trust
the people we regard as authorities. In order to become suspicious of our
news reporters, government officials, business executives, school teachers,
and NASA scientists we must become victims of their incompetence or crimes
repeatedly,
or watch other people become victims. We could refer to this as "trust
breaking" a person.
Questioning authority is like homosexualityTelling your friend that our government was involved in the September 11th attack is equivalent to telling a child that his parents are awful people, or putting a saddle on a horse for the very first time, or asking your friend to try homosexuality (or heterosexuality for some of your friends).Your friends will resist you, but you should not let it bother you.
Instead, you have to keep pushing, and eventually you may "trust break"
them.
If we must be pushed, it is unnaturalIf it were natural for us to question authority, we wouldn't have to push people to do it. When we find that virtually everybody has to be pushed into a particular activity, it is a sign that the activity is unnatural for us.Conversely, activities that we do without encouragement are likely to be natural for us. For example, nobody has to push us into eating food, except for foods that are unnatural to us, such as dirt, grass, and wood. If it were natural for humans to distrust each other, we would do it
even as children. The fact that it takes a long time to become suspicious
of authority is evidence that humans were designed for respectable leaders,
not corrupt leaders.
Our world is a messMost people in leadership positions seem to be either corrupt, incompetent, or afraid to stand up to the corruption.We should give ourselves a more pleasant life, and that means providing ourselves with leaders we can trust and respect. So instead of tolerating our situation, how about helping to move the
human race beyond this condition of endless wars, crime, and chaos?
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