Absurdity again. Bill Kirton
It’s probably a form
of cheating but I’m going to open this October blog with exactly the same
formulation I used last month. However, I do have what I think is a good reason
for it. The blog (not the reason) begins like this: ‘For this month’s blog I had
thought of conveying my despair, anger and profound sadness at the appalling
inhumanity, cynicism, failures, and uncaring responses of those in power to
such devastating news on all fronts’.
In September I meant
it, but it was also an excuse for offering what I claimed would be a little
‘light relief’ from the prevailing mayhem. Since then, however, the 'despair,
anger and sadness' have been further compounded at a much more intense level by
the details of the ordeal undergone by Sarah Everard at the hands of a serving
policeman. Not only that but since he abducted, raped and murdered
her, 81 more women in the UK have been killed, probably by men, and
new statistics reveal that only 2% of reported rapes in the UK end in a
prosecution.
The fact that fellow
humans – people apparently like us – are capable of such callous, mindless
cruelty and that the official response to it seems so uncaring is very hard to
absorb and yet it’s a ‘truth’ (albeit one which makes no sense). Even while
deploring it, an easy, convenient way of accommodating it would be to
characterise its unnatural extremes and comprehensive meaninglessness as absurd
because, in the overall context of human interactions nothing about such acts
can be said to ‘mean’ anything. But taking that route is, in most respects,
akin to semi-sanitising it. Such things are way beyond absurd. In fact, we
don’t have an adjective strong enough to express their inhumanity, their distance
from any form of acceptable, ‘meaningful’ conduct.
Faced with the
inexplicable, the senselessness, the apparent arbitrariness of things, Camus
identified absurdity as a potential source of despair but, more importantly
according to him, the very fact that we recognise it offers us an opportunity
to take action against it, fight it, resist its ubiquity. I’m a huge admirer of
his but I think he got this one wrong. Absurdity isn’t just a concept, it’s a
reality, a fact beyond our understanding, and it renews and manifests itself
constantly in different ways. It’s not a phenomenon one can ‘conquer’ or
‘overcome’. It questions the fundamentals of who we are, of what everything is.
It's an appalling inevitability.
Umberto’s recent blog, Murder Most Casual, deplored both the lack of rigour in the investigations of some specific murders and the background against which they were conducted – a background he labelled as one of ‘unabashed public criminality’. Nothing compares with the specific horrors inflicted on Sarah Everard, but the collective cynicism of those currently at the head of UK society, their carelessness of the damage caused by their decisions (or lack of), their wilful insistence on their way being the only correct one is, at the public level, making absurdity the norm. Their values (a totally inappropriate word in the circumstances) relate in no way to those whose lives they’re destroying. And it goes further. The people who elected them must know (or, at the very least, suspect) that their leaders are lying and yet it seems that most of them may intend to vote the same way. They see these people playing political games, manipulating statistics, and their support makes them complicit in the lies and deceits.
And now, for our delectation, on top of all this we have the Pandora Papers. At private and public levels we’re in a new Dark Age and there are definitely more things in heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy..
Comments
Nothing suits everybody, I know, but writing about this in the way you have connects people on this site and others, and can reverberate with the 'goodness' around, although sometimes this is hard to find. Take care, from Peter.
Some people fucking suck and should just die. We've had this conversation before, so you know I won't mince words here.
Thanks for writing and for your honesty.
xo
e