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27 May 2006
CHALLENGING THE MEDIA FROM
A COMPASSIONATE PERSPECTIVE
By: Matthew Bain
Media Lens is a UK media watch service which has just published a new book
‘Guardians of Power: The Myth of the Liberal Media’. In this
interview Media Lens discuss with computer network consultant and Buddhist
practitioner Matthew Bain how they have been strongly influenced by the
Buddhist ideal of compassion and the role model of the Bodhisattva –
the hero who practices six great virtues known as ‘perfections’.
Bain: Please can you explain what Media Lens
is?
Media Lens: Media Lens is an online, UK-based media watch project, set up
in 2001, providing detailed and documented criticism of bias and omissions
in the British media. The Media Lens team consists of two editors (David
Edwards and David Cromwell) and a webmaster (Oliver Maw). Through our free
email Media Alerts, we provide detailed analysis of news reporting in the
UK media, concentrating on the ‘quality’ liberal print and broadcast
media. Our aim is to expose bias, inconsistencies, inaccuracies, omissions
and untruths. We challenge journalists and editors by email and invite their
response. We then collate and analyse the material and distribute a Media
Alert to members of the public who have signed up for the service. We urge
our readers to adopt a polite, rational and respectful tone when emailing
journalists – we strongly oppose all abuse and personal attack.
We often then follow up our alerts with updates containing analysis of and
commentary on mainstream responses to our alerts, our readers’ emails,
and so on. Media Alerts are archived at the Media Lens website (www.medialens.org).
We also send out Cogitations to a separate list of subscribers – these
explore related themes from more personal, psychological and philosophical
perspectives.
Bain: How much success has Media Lens had?
Media Lens: This isn’t really for us to say. We try not to worry too
much about results. The veteran Australian journalist and film-maker John
Pilger wrote this in the foreword to our new book, Guardians of Power (Pluto
Press, 2006):
“The creators and editors of Medialens, David Edwards and David Cromwell,
have had such influence in a short time that, by holding to account those
who, it is said, write history’s draft, they may well have changed
the course of modern historiography. They have certainly torn up the ‘ethical
blank cheque’, which Richard Drayton referred to, and have exposed
as morally corrupt ‘the right to bomb, to maim, to imprison without
trial …’. Without Medialens during the attack on and occupation
of Iraq, the full gravity of that debacle might have been consigned to oblivion,
and to bad history."
On the other hand, the BBC's Andrew Marr said (when he was still political
editor):
"I'm afraid I think it is just pernicious and anti-journalistic. I
note that you advertise an organisation called Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting so I guess at least you have a sense of humour. But I don't think
I will bother with 'medialens' next time, if you don't mind."
So take your pick!
Bain: You have said that you intend compassion
to be the basis and motivating force behind the Media Lens project. How
does this work in practice?
Media Lens: We try to do whatever we believe is most likely to relieve suffering.
There are several aspects to this. We try to focus on the most urgent issues
of the day. If our government is trying to persuade the public to support
a war against Iraq, we try to publicise arguments against mass violence
as a solution to human problems. We point out the costs of violence and
the benefits of responses rooted in restraint and compassion. Before the
March 2003 invasion, we referred readers to credible estimates of the likely
disastrous consequences for the civilian population of Iraq.
We indicated the deep flaws in US-UK government arguments to show that war
in fact was not at all necessary, that genuine peaceful alternatives existed.
Basically, we tried to encourage peaceful opposition to our government's
determination to wage war for profit. The same with climate change –
it now threatens unprecedented catastrophe, the destruction of billions
of human and animal lives. So we encourage readers to challenge newspapers
on their promotion of cheap flights and mass consumerism generally.
But in discussing specific issues we are hoping to raise awareness of deeper
systemic problems inherent to political and economic systems rooted in the
pursuit of unlimited profits. For example, how honest can a newspaper really
be about the root causes of climate change when it depends for 75% of its
revenue on big business advertising – on precisely the companies selling
the cheap flights, the new cars and so on – in its own pages?
We believe that we all need to acquire the tools of intellectual self-defence
so that we can resist propaganda provoking hatred of foreign and domestic
‘enemies’, and adverts stimulating greed, so that we can trust
our own capacity for independent, critical thought. Our society encourages
passivity and childlike dependence on authority. We encourage people to
challenge authority, to have faith and confidence in themselves. We encourage
people to challenge us, too – nothing should be taken on blind trust.
A third theme is that we encourage people to seek confidence and rationality
in compassion, rather than in anger, say, or conformity. We emphasise peaceful
challenges to authority. We reject not only violence, but also anger. Given
that compassion, tolerance and patience are great virtues, then leaders
promoting violence and greed are ideal objects for meditation. We can use
them to strengthen our compassion and wisdom.
Bain: Why are leaders promoting violence and
greed ideal objects for meditation?
Media Lens: In our view, Tony Blair, for example, has consciously deceived
parliament and public in pursuit of a war of aggression – the supreme
war crime according to the Nuremberg tribunals. Blair’s actions have
resulted in the deaths of several hundred thousand innocent people, as well
as almost limitless pain, injury, anxiety, grief and other physical and
mental torments. The motive, we also believe, is rooted in Western greed
for control of natural resources in Iraq and in the Gulf. Is it possible
to feel compassion for this man?
We can reflect that Blair is a product of conditions – he sees the
world in a way dominated by his education, upbringing, friends, family and
colleagues. Would he think and act the same way if he had been exposed to
different conditions? Is he to blame for the conditions that influenced
him? Is he the sole destructive actor or condition, or is he merely one
tiny link in a vast chain of cause and effect that precedes and transcends
him? We can argue, for example, that what has been done to Iraq is actually
the culmination of billions of selfish thoughts in limitless individuals
over decades, even centuries. After all, where does corporate greed for
oil come from? Where does militarism come from? Does it come from Blair?
Hardly.
We can reflect on Blair’s lack of inherent existence – who or
what actually is Tony Blair? Is he his mind? Which part of his mind –
which thought? Is he any particular thought? Is there a creator of thoughts
that we can call ‘Blair’, or do thoughts merely arise from conditions
beyond the control of some creator in the background (and would the ‘creator’s’
decisions and thoughts simply arise from conditions?), like bubbles forming
and rising in a glass of lemonade? We can imagine the suffering Blair will
undergo as a result of his uncompassionate actions and as a result of ageing,
sickness and death. We can reflect that if we can muster some compassion
for him then this strengthens our compassion for other people who appear
less guilty of terrible crimes, less harmful. We visit a gym to lift weights
to become stronger, do we not? If we can compassionately ‘lift’
Blair in our minds, then our compassion will surely be untroubled by most
other tests in life.
Bain: Your compassionate approach is inspired
by Mahayana Buddhism, which offers the role model of the Bodhisattva. A
Bodhisattva is anyone who, motivated by great compassion, continuously wishes
to achieve the enlightened state of a Buddha in order to benefit all living
beings without exception. The way of life of the Bodhisattva is the six
perfections, the great virtues of generosity, moral discipline, patience,
effort, mental stabilisation and wisdom. You have said that you aspire for
your Media Alerts to embody these six perfections. Is such an aspiration
achievable?
Media Lens: The aspiration is certainly achievable although even to aspire
to attain an enlightened state is an awesome achievement. Can we actually
embody the six perfections in our work? Definitely not, at present. We are
complete beginners who are far, far away from being able to embody these
exalted mind states. However, we do aspire to value compassion, generosity
and patience; and we do try to be motivated by concern for others rather
than concern for our own welfare.
We feel it is appalling for any journalist to compromise what he or she
writes out of concern for career, status or the health of a bank account
when real people like us are being killed in their tens of thousands, for
example, in Iraq. Particularly when one reflects that if the media had done
their job in 2002-2003, war would not have been possible. We believe that
by aspiring to be more compassionate it is possible to make some small improvement
and perhaps help others. But we are constantly aware that we may even be
doing more harm than good – making people more angry, more critical
of others and less compassionate – we keep this possibility very much
in mind.
Bain: One of the aspects of the perfection of
generosity is giving fearlessness, in other words protecting other living
beings from fear or danger. Your Media Alerts point out that mainstream
news organisations cover some of the world’s most serious problems
while obscuring their causes, and that as a result media consumers find
themselves filled with feelings of anxiety and fear, not to mention powerlessness
and apathy. Are you deliberately trying to release people from this state
– to give fearlessness?
Media Lens: As you know, the roots of fearlessness also lie in a realistic
appraisal of the situation we are in. If we think it’s safe to abuse,
exploit and kill other beings, it is no bad thing to be made aware of the
terrifying consequences of such actions. This dis-illusionment can lead
from ignorance through fear to fearlessness. Similarly, we are quite happy
to discuss the terrifying realities of climate change, war, and the compromise
that makes these possible.
But a major aim of what we’re doing is to address people’s confusion.
The media is deeply bewildering – the reality is summed up by the
title of media analyst Danny Schecter’s book The More You Watch The
Less You Know. Providing rational frameworks for understanding specific
issues – Haiti, Kosovo, East Timor, climate change – and broader
issues – how the media works, the motives driving foreign policy –
surely gives people greater confidence that they can make sense of the world,
and that they can therefore rely on their own judgement. We also try to
explain the advantages of concern for others over self-cherishing. We don’t
want people to feel dependent on us, we want them to feel that the issues
are really not that complicated, and that anyone can form sensible judgements
with a modicum of hard work.
We also try to promote fearlessness by encouraging compassionate rather
than angry responses to problems. We believe that anger is deeply demotivating,
in fact crippling, whereas great compassion provides an inexhaustible, and
in fact increasing, source of energy and inspiration.
Bain: One of the aspects of a Bodhisattva’s
moral discipline is not to criticise others, but to focus on his or her
own faults instead. The Buddhist master Atisha said: “Do not look
for faults in others, but look for faults in yourself, and purge them like
bad blood. Do not contemplate your own good qualities, but contemplate the
good qualities of others, and respect everyone as a servant would.”
(Quoted, Eight Steps to Happiness, Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, Tharpa Publications,
2000, p.261). Some of your Media Alerts are very critical of the work of
individual journalists. Aren’t you breaking the Bodhisattva’s
moral code by criticising others in this way?
Media Lens: This is a question that concerns us greatly. We try to make
clear that our focus is on faults in the arguments of journalists rather
than in the journalists themselves. Typically, we will present a mainstream
journalist’s arguments, contrast these with an alternative range of
arguments based on verifiable facts and multiple credible sources, and invite
readers to decide which arguments are more or less credible. Often we point
out that an erroneous argument is actually part of a pattern that stretches
right across the media, so that we are pointing to institutionalised bias
rather than individual ‘bad apples’.
We often point out that the vast majority of journalists are not deliberately
deceitful – it’s not that they’re bad people, liars and
so on – there is no wicked conspiracy. We encourage readers to understand
the systemic factors behind individual performance: journalists are selected
because they have been educated to hold the right views by corporate media
that are designed to maximise profits. The whole cultural, political and
social system puts immense pressure on privileged journalists to hold ‘the
right’ views about the world – it is not their fault that they
have little or no access to alternative arguments. On another level, one
can even argue that it is not really their fault that they believe it is
‘realistic’ to prioritise their own self-interest above the
interests of others – that’s what the whole culture tells them
to do.
There are a couple of other considerations. Journalists who advanced arguments
for war against Iraq in 2002-2003 were vital parts of a media-military machine
that resulted in the deaths of well over 100,000 (perhaps as many as 300,000)
Iraqi civilians and the devastation of an entire country. By themselves
promoting mass violence as a solution to human problems, by persuading others
to take those arguments seriously, they were causing immense harm to themselves
and others. In his book, An Introduction to Buddhist Ethics, Peter Harvey
writes:
“Asanga says that a Bodhisattva will lie so as to protect others from
death or mutilation, though he will not lie to save his own life. He will
slander an unwholesome adviser of a person, and use harsh, severe words
to move someone from unwholesome to wholesome action.” (Harvey, An
Introduction to Buddhist Ethics, Cambridge University Press, 2000, p.139)
In the Commentary on Dharmaraksita's The Poison-Destroying Peacock Mind
Training, Geshe Lhundub Sopa writes:
“If you should encounter some erroneous teaching that leads other
beings into great suffering, such as rebirth in hell, you should not be
indifferent. Rather, you should take action to combat such a harmful teaching.
If you do this, you will be acting with a form of jealousy. This is not
like ordinary jealousy, which is just the desire to ruin someone’s
happiness, rather it is the desire to root out the wrong teaching so that
the correct teaching will endure. While it appears to be jealousy, it is
actually different; it is motivated by the concern that the source of happiness
will be destroyed if the correct teaching disappears.” (Geshe Lhundub
Sopa, Peacock In The Poison Grove, Wisdom Books, 2001, pp.254-5)
In The Six Perfections, Geshe Sonam Rinchen writes:
"The tenth [way of assisting others] consists of giving support by
castigating those who are engaged in detrimental activities. This may entail
taking stern measures to stop them, since one should not condone or indulge
others’ fondness for harmful actions." (Geshe Sonam Rinchen,
The Six Perfections, Snow Lion, 1998, p.40)
So although it is unpleasant to criticise journalists, and is risky both
for their psychological welfare and our own – it’s easy to become
habitually negative, cynical and even angry in this work – we believe
it is important to do so.
Bain: One of the aspects of the perfection of
patience is not retaliating. Some of the journalists you have singled out
for criticism have responded harshly – basically they have retaliated.
Isn’t this a natural response? Have you retaliated in return?
Media Lens: If it was a natural response it would occur invariably in all
people and cultures around the world. This is not the case. In her book,
Ancient Futures, the linguist Helena Norberg-Hodge reported a remarkable
absence of retaliation in the Buddhist culture of Ladakh, even amongst children.
We believe that Buddhist practitioners meditating on the benefits of patience,
the faults of anger, and the lack of inherent existence of the targets of
anger, can completely remove the impulse to retaliation.
We worry very much that by generating anger in journalists we are inadvertently
causing harm. This may well be exacerbated by our encouraging members of
the public to write to journalists. At the end of every email we append
these words:
“The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and
respect for others. In writing letters to journalists, we strongly urge
readers to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.”
People do not always heed these words and sometimes send angry abuse to
journalists. This is a source of real concern to us; it’s something
we strongly discourage. Is it outweighed by the fact that receiving large
number of mostly polite and rational emails can persuade journalists and
newspapers to reconsider their stand on war, on the impact of rampant consumerism
on climate change, as we believe has sometimes happened to some extent?
We hope so.
We do occasionally get angry, but generally we try to respond to abuse without
anger, with restrained and polite emails. This emphasis on self-restraint
is unusual in left-leaning political debate. We’ve noticed that this
seems to have had quite an impact on both journalists and readers. Even
journalists who have to deal with large numbers of emails – which
is not something anyone enjoys – have responded positively to our
work. In recent months senior journalists like Peter Barron (editor of Newsnight),
Peter Wilby (former editor of the New Statesman) and film-maker John Pilger
have all commented on our restraint and politeness. This is not normally
something senior players in the rough and tumble world of journalism would
focus on – this is encouraging. For example, the Newsnight editor,
Peter Barron, wrote on the BBC’s website last November:
“One of Media Lens’ less ingratiating habits is to suggest to
their readers that they contact me to complain about things we’ve
done. They’re a website whose rather grand aim is to “correct
the distorted vision of the corporate media”. They prolifically let
us know what they think of our coverage, mainly on Iraq, George Bush and
the Middle East, from a Chomskyist perspective. In fact I rather like them.
David Cromwell and David Edwards, who run the site, are unfailingly polite,
their points are well-argued and sometimes they’re plain right.”
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/4426334.stm)
Bain: One of the aspects of the perfection of
effort is overcoming discouragement. Do you ever get discouraged and, if
so, how do you overcome it?
Media Lens: Discouragement is often a sign that a compassionate motivation
has given way to some kind of self-centred concern – perhaps anger,
or frustration at the lack of some kind of reward (recognition or praise,
for example).
We also sometimes feel discouraged when we read the latest news indicating
that climate change has already reached the point of no return – that
we are guaranteed environmental catastrophe on a massive scale regardless
of any actions we now take. We try to put that out of our minds and just
keep going. We tell ourselves that human beings are amazingly resourceful
– maybe we can do something unexpected. Maybe the lessons we’re
receiving in terms of the consequences of selfishness can shatter our conceits
about inherent existence, the exaggerated value of selfishness, the under-rated
value of compassion, and so on.
The wider point, though, to reiterate, is that discouragement is often a
sign that compassion has given way to self-cherishing, particularly to anger.
Then we need to reflect that our job is to work for the benefit of others
– anger is an indulgence neither they, nor we, can afford.
Bain: Traditionally the perfection of mental
stabilisation means meditation. In your work you quote stories of Buddhist
meditators who spend years meditating on compassion. Would they be better
off campaigning like you, or would you be better off meditating like them?
Media Lens: We can’t think of a more remarkable or important achievement
than being willing and able to meditate single-mindedly on compassion for
years. In our opinion, people able to do this are a real cause for hope.
If political activism has any meaning, it is because it is rooted in compassion.
But that compassion must be rooted in an authentic, profound and living
tradition – something that requires the realisations of individuals
able to travel to the far reaches of understanding and to return with the
personally experienced truth of the power and importance of compassion.
This is really vital work. No one able to devote themselves to this kind
of thing should abandon it for the kind of work we’re doing. We see
our work almost as an attempt to make use of the compassionate raw materials
mined by these people.
On the other hand, we feel we need to do as much as we can to develop compassion
and wisdom in ourselves. There are two ways of doing this: first, our political
activism should be rooted in compassion, it should be an expression of compassion,
not something separate. Second, activism should be supported by a serious
commitment to developing compassion and wisdom in ourselves through meditation,
reading, discussion, study and so on.
Should Buddhists spend more time in understanding the insitutionalisation
of greed, hatred and ignorance in modern society? Stephen Batchelor writes:
“The contemporary social engagement of dharma practice is rooted in
awareness of how self-centred confusion and craving can no longer be adequately
understood only as psychological drives that manifest themselves in subjective
states of anguish. We find these drives embodied in the very economic, military,
and political structures that influence the lives of the majority of people
on earth.” (Batchelor, Buddhism Without Beliefs – A Contemporary
Guide To Awakening, Bloomsbury, 1997, p.112)
We agree. While we understand that Dharma traditionally focuses on removing
the obscuring afflictions in individuals, the problem today is that institutionalised
psychological ‘pollution’ is making it extremely hard for individuals
to even +consider+ the need to work on such issues – quite the reverse.
As Noam Chomsky has observed, the corporate goal “is to ensure that
the human beings who [it is] interacting with, you and me, also become inhuman.
You have to drive out of people’s heads natural sentiments like care
about others, or sympathy, or solidarity... The ideal is to have individuals
who are totally disassociated from one another, who don’t care about
anyone else... whose conception of themselves, their sense of value, is
‘Just how many created wants can I satisfy?’” (Quoted,
Joel Bakan, The Corporation, Constable, 2004, pp.134-135)
How can that not be an issue for anyone who cares about human suffering?
If it’s for strategic reasons – Buddhists know they will be
labelled as ‘political agitators’ and ‘troublemakers’
and targeted by the propaganda system – that’s one thing. If
the issue isn’t even acknowledged or discussed, that’s something
else again. We can’t imagine how that can be justified.
Bain: The perfection of wisdom means understanding the ultimate nature of
reality. It is the supreme attainment of a Bodhisattva and can only be achieved
by abandoning attachment to wealth, reputation, praise and pleasure. Although
you are a writer and journalist, your Media Lens project means that you
have little chance of ever making a living from or having a position of
respect within the mainstream media. Is the sacrifice worth it?
Media Lens: Remarkably, exactly the opposite is the case. You've probably
heard this famous story:
“I used to hold up people by day and rob villages at night; but even
so, food and clothes were scarce. Now that I practise Dharma, I am short
of neither food nor clothing, and my enemies leave me in peace.” (Quoted,
Liberation in the Palm of Your Hand, Pabongka Rinpoche, Wisdom Books, 1997,
p.336)
When we started Media Lens, we both had fledgling careers in the media –
we had both published books, had both published articles in a few mainstream
newspapers and smaller magazines. It’s possible we could have developed
careers as freelance writers or as media journalists. The question behind
Media Lens was this:
‘What happens if we no longer give any thought to being published,
being paid, being respectable, being liked by commissioning editors? What
happens if we just tell the truth as we see it about suffering and the causes
of suffering?’
It seemed to us few media analysts had ever really tried it – people
are generally hoping to make money from this kind of thing – and before
the internet they couldn’t reach anyone anyway. So we thought this
would be a great experiment and it fitted perfectly with what is, for us,
the absolutely central proposal of Mahayana Buddhism. Here are two versions
that have inspired us greatly:
“Come to an understanding that no matter how it may seem, the root
of all suffering is in actuality the desire to accomplish our own benefit
and our own aims, and the root of all happiness is the relinquishment of
that concern and the desire to accomplish the benefit of others.”
(Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche)
“As much as you can, cherish all the beings – human and animal
– around you with a good heart, and try to benefit them by giving
them whatever help they need. Give them every single thing you can to make
them happy: even a few sweet words or some interesting conversation that
benefits their minds, that stops their problems and makes them happy. Use
every opportunity, every action of your body, speech, and mind, to increase
your virtue.” (Lama Zopa Rinpoche)
We also had an increasing sense of outrage at the fact that journalists,
ourselves included, would be willing to subordinate the welfare of others
to career concern. How can we be willing to cooperate so meekly with this
compromised, corporate system of media power when the consequences are so
horrendous for living beings? It seemed so cruel, so narrow-minded –
even if the attempt was a laughable failure, it felt like a good idea to
at least try to rebel against the selfishness in ourselves and as entrenched
in the media system itself.
The satisfaction of writing out of this motivation is incomparably greater
than that of writing in hope of respectability, status and financial reward.
Everything we send out is free, it’s intended as an act of generosity
and support. The responses we’ve had have been amazing – messages
of love (there’s no other word to use) from all corners of the world.
It’s been really astonishing. We’ve had criticism too, of course,
but people are clearly very eager to read media analysis uncompromised by
corporate control, career concerns, and the like. And of course the irony
is that because they appreciate what we’re doing we have received
financial support that has helped us keep going.
On respect, the curious thing is we do seem to have won some respect in
the mainstream. A very credible media insider told us that there is an undercurrent
of impassioned dissent in the BBC – journalists who are deeply unhappy
at the way they are being used as a mouthpiece for government propaganda
– for whom Media Lens acts as “a rallying point”. Journalists
who care about honesty in the media, who recognise the massive constraints
on freedom of speech, strongly support what we’re doing – they
have often sent us private messages of support. They are frightened to speak
out, much less to be associated with us, but they do respect what we’re
doing. One journalist working for the Observer (a paper we have heavily
criticised), told us:
“Thanks very much. It goes without saying, many thanks for providing
the inspiration/facts and for all your and DC’s [David Cromwell] good
work. You are a constant needle, comfort and inspiration. Great stuff.”
Bain: The ultimate reality understood by the
perfection of wisdom is that everything is empty of inherent existence.
In this discussion you have talked of the importance of “shatter[ing]
our conceits about inherent existence”. Yet the passage from Stephen
Batchelor which you quote above implies that negative states of mind ‘inhere’
in our political and economic institutions, making them inherently bad.
Traditionally, kindness is the main quality that Buddhists are encouraged
to see in economic and political institutions – or at least in the
people who work in them – because they provide us with vital services
or because they give us problems which enable us to develop such virtues
as non-attachment, patience and compassion. Do you think that our present
economic and political system is inherently bad?
Media Lens: The Canadian lawyer, Joel Bakan, describes how corporations
are abstract concepts that are legally obliged to subordinate the welfare
of people and planet to profit. Because charity and compassion are illegal
under corporate law, except insofar as these increase profits, Bakan argues
that corporations are essentially psychopathic in nature. Bakan quotes a
key 19th century pronouncement by an English law lord, Lord Bowen: “...charity
has no business to sit at boards of directors +qua+ charity. There is, however,
a kind of charitable dealing which is for the interest of those who practise
it, and to that extent and in that garb (I admit not a very philanthropic
garb) charity may sit at the board, but for no other purpose”. (Lord
Bowen, quoted, Bakan, The Corporation, Constable, 2004, pp.38-39)
According to The Body Shop founder, Anita Roddick, the corporation “stops
people from having a sense of empathy with the human condition”; it
“separate[s] us from who we are... The language of business is not
the language of the soul or the language of humanity. It’s a language
of indifference; it’s a language of separation, of secrecy, of hierarchy”.
(Ibid, pp.55-56)
So what should our response be? Insofar as this system benefits us, we can
recognise its kindness, as you say. Insofar as it harms us, we can practice
patience. This isn’t so hard. It is far easier to understand that
a corporation is an abstract, non-inherently existent entity than it is
to understand the same of an individual person. It’s clear that a
corporation is just a label applied to a large number of buildings, constantly
changing personnel, bank accounts, business principles and so on. We know
General Motors isn’t a person with a personality that we can hate.
People might hate the chairman or CEO – although their hands are tied
by shareholders, corporate law, and so on – but we can’t hate
a label.
But insofar as the corporation is harming others we should work with all
our might to prevent that harm. We need to raise awareness amongst the public
of the extraordinary costs of the unlimited pursuit of corporate greed for
people and planet. We need to work to rein in the worst destructiveness
and then work to reform the political and economic systems that make this
possible. This means democratic movements rooted in compassion and respect
for life, movements that promote freedom, equality and justice. All of this
should be rooted in compassion for suffering, not anger.
Our guide in reforming the system can be our awareness that selfish greed
is inherently harmful. We need only reflect that corporate law enshrines
not just greed, but infinite, unrestrained greed as a legal principle that
must not be compromised. This is the cause of many of the problems facing
us today. The root of that, in turn, is that selfish individuals have created
these laws to protect their interests. As ever, positive change begins with
a recognition of the negative consequences of self-cherishing and the benefits
of caring for others.
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