Thursday, May 30, 2013

Hope: a Reasonable Response

I just discovered the website TomDispatch.com, and I’m in the process of deciding if the entire site is as useful as the first essay I've read from the site.  It’s called “Too Soon to Tell: the Case for Hope” by Rebecca Solnit.  I suppose writing this blog is a tiny act of hope.  Solnit’s essay teaches that hope is a step that leads to or allows action.  The excerpts below, however, mostly focus on rational reasons for hope.
If you take the long view, you’ll see how startlingly, how unexpectedly but regularly things change. Not by magic, but by the incremental effect of countless acts of courage, love, and commitment, the small drops that wear away stones and carve new landscapes, and sometimes by torrents of popular will that change the world suddenly. To say that is not to say that it will all come out fine in the end regardless. I’m just telling you that everything is in motion, and sometimes we are ourselves that movement…. 
 For a few years, I spoke about hope around this country and in Europe. I repeatedly ran into comfortably situated people who were hostile to the idea of hope: they thought that hope somehow betrayed the desperate and downtrodden, as if the desperate wanted the solidarity of misery from the privileged, rather than action. Hopelessness for people in extreme situations means resignation to one’s own deprivation or destruction. Hope can be a survival strategy. For comfortably situated people, hopelessness means cynicism and letting oneself off the hook. If everything is doomed, then nothing is required (and vice versa). 
 Despair is often premature: it’s a form of impatience as well as certainty. My favorite comment about political change comes from Zhou En-Lai, the premier of the People’s Republic of China under Chairman Mao. Asked in the early 1970s about his opinion of the French Revolution, he reportedly answered, “Too soon to tell.”... 



2 comments:

Unknown said...

Too soon to tell ...

Unknown said...

It seems like pessimists are usually more often correct than are optimists, but optimists have more fun.