Zombies are everywhere and when will we be done with all this.
That’s what I thought several years ago in being constantly bombarded with
Walking Dead commercials. But I was told that it held great thought provoking
science fiction currency so I decided to take a
look.
While it probably gets most people ruminating about end of the
world scenarios, it got me thinking about the beginning of the world. In our
infancy, how did people group together in order to compete for limited
resources. How ruthless or just were they in securing survival at the expense of
their neighbors.
In one scene, our heroes come across an encampment where supplies
have been left unattended, and thus they defer on helping themselves. That
decision is called into question when the good guys later find the inhabitants
slaughtered, and all the supplies gone to the spoils of a less enlightened
group.
Internally, order among the autocratically lead clan is kept
according to the laws of deception, fear and a careful cultivation of entitled
superiority over everyone else. Even so, the more democratic brand of survival
in the Walking Dead always seems to find the advantage over evil. But if you
could actually track the world to its origins, I believe you’d find most of us
derive of the more despotic lineages.
Nonetheless, nations eventually formed and such cutthroat necessity
diminished among groups inside those borders. Legal and societal protections
took precedence. On the other hand, we have yet to develop any real legal
restraints that keep nations from fighting for those same limited
resources.
Hence, nations still war as humans did at the outset – pursuing
resource security abroad to ensure economic stability at home. Still, if your
Roman Legions can’t be roused enough to move onto Britain, an about face through
Gaul has to be the standing order.
As such, it follows that in every war each side always tries to
portray the other as the aggressor. In other words, public opinion mattered long
before the invention of the printing press, and governments have always been
subject to this informal constraint.
But governments being constrained by external pressure – short of
war – is pretty new. King Leopold II’s horrific exploitation of the Congo Free
State serves as a significant marker in the informal regard. Killing approximately 10 million people in
turning the area into a huge slave labor camp, the world actually was galvanized
and resulted in the first mass human rights movement.
So in our enlightened age, you can’t just Genghis Khan yourself
across the steppe. On the other hand, it
appears that Vladimir Putin missed the message as he flexes his muscles across
the old Russian Empire.
Acting over what they consider their sphere of influence and
exerting military and economic control for the betterment of Russia, the
constraints are limited when you own the media and enjoy immense domestic
popularity. All those among the populace who still lament the loss of the
Czarist and Soviet empire doesn’t hurt either.
Such a blatant power play would be harder to pull off here but that
doesn’t we defer in pursuit of getting our hands on what others have. We’re just
more deft in going about it – especially in regards to what we consider our
sphere of influence.
Once the possibility of the direct occupations that took place all
throughout Latin America fell out of favor in the first part of the
20th Century, establishing hegemonic puppets under the guise of the
Cold War secured us everything from Sugar and Cooper to Oil and Bananas. Only recently has South America started edge
us out.
Fortunately, we now have Muslim extremists to help sell
intervention in the Middle East that keep the energy flowing in our direction.
So when will it end – never.
Our only resource is to keep talking and staying informed before we
become the walking dead.
I appreciate your take, Rich, being relatively slightly more optimistic than mine. My read on TWD's creators' driving principle, however, is that, in fact, WE are the virus and we will ultimately consume all the world's natural resources including its people and leaving nothing in the balance. As much as we look to science and all our political leaders for intricate solutions on local as well as global scales, eventually the sun will burn out and lead all those unfortunate billions into the realm of the walking dead.
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