Posts Tagged ‘insight’

Monday, July 4th, 2011

History is Written by the Victors

“History is written by the victors” – so said Winston Churchill. And interestingly, wag that he often was, Churchill always said that he would write it – and indeed he did.

Truth is I use to believe that too. But in our day the lines are getting blurred and history is constantly being re-written; re-interpreted and re-construed as social mores shift and change and frankly as technology or better its applications influence and impact our ability to both record and change and share.

And it’s the record and change and share that I am focused on. Never in the history of the world have we had the ability to do all three with such efficiency and effectiveness not to mention speed and sheer capacity to store data and information.

Yet it’s the confluence of the three that concerns me.

Any recorded history was always colored by the author – victor or vanquished. And it was up to us – the reader or analyst or whatever to form opinions based on our own biases and color skew. Ergo – history is rarely if ever objective.

Ask the Israelis and the Palestinians; The British and the Irish; The Vietnamese and the Americans; The Turks and the Armenians and on and on and on.

 And no doubt –within all of the conflicting accounts sometimes clearly and sometimes buried deeply are common “facts” that while interpreted differently by the protagonists allow us as third party observers to glean some semblance of “truth” – whatever that might mean.

But here is the thing – I see two disturbing trends – one is the ability to go into records and change them to fit a particular personal view. While that has always been possible and was no doubt prevalent even in the age of parchment technology has given the perverter of history an edge. With a key stroke or two empires could disappear; despots become benign and famous events can take on new meaning.

Read this article from the New Yorker:

To me the point is not the ignorance – that isn’t new – what’s troubling is the attempt to change what was to fit a view of what someone wishes is in order to become what will be.

Scary…

The second issue is the speed with which we globally share information or misinformation and as we all know what we share must be true…No?

Innocent until proven guilty has lost its meaning; Faked news is an everyday occurrence. We have lost the ability to distinguish between PR and fact – and the stuff that was once relegated to the fringe lunatics of conspiracy and craziness has gone mainstream.

I am seriously concerned. For us and for the next generation – what hope do they have if we can’t even begin to trust our sources of information ; enlightenment and education.

How will we form opinions? Learn? Not repeat our worst mistakes?

Once we could look ahead fairly secure in the knowledge that we had a past to fall back on – yet as we re-invent our present by changing the past – how will we ever correct the mistakes?

So I am worried.

Listen:

The future ain’t what it used to be.

Yogi Berra

What do you think?

  • With power comes responsibility but I have decided to be confident in our young people. Their world will be different and they will have to make their own mistakes to make it better. Woody Allen's film Midnight in Paris isn't the perfect movie Annie Hall was but i like the conceit--that every generation thinks some other generation was the golden ...
  • I think what's changed with the advent of technology is not the accuracy of the recorded history, or the agendas of the people writing that history. Only the speed at which this information is proliferated has been affected, since people are more active cyber citizens than ever, and education is being given to more and more children. So in the ...
  • Let me qualify -- technology should be our best abiluty to preserve -- its when its abused that I get nervous
Monday, January 10th, 2011

How thin is thin?

How thin is thin?
How small is small?
How big is big?
How red is red or blue is blue?
How D is 3?

Guess where I am?

Monday, August 18th, 2008

Every Dog Hath his Day

Every dog hath his day…since I started with the August Dog Days notion last week – I thought it only fair to continue with the theme and Shakespeare helped me along – although for you literary types…a slight digression – I have used a quote that pre-dates Will’s use.

  • The notion of "made up of people" has never been more true than as portrayed by this Olympics -- did you see the opening and closing...???
  • hmmm...tough one to pin down this ramble. But always get my hackles up, and tail wagging, when people rant on about governments or companies. Because at the end of the day, they are made up of people, human beings. So I suppose those groups go for the lowest "common desire denominators", to get people to join in the action (be ...