Saec july14 dm

Page 44

Our Sources Say

Hollow World

I

saw “Apocalypse Now” in 1979. I still remember how troubled and exhausted I was when it ended. The sheer violence and gore were horrific and sickening. But the pathology of the characters was deeply disturbing. The most memorable scene for me was Robert Duvall’s Col. Bill Kilgore telling Martin Sheen’s Captain Willard, “I love the smell of napalm in the morning,” as American planes carpet-bombed an enemy outpost in the background. I assumed “Apocalypse Now” was merely Francis Ford Coppola’s statement against the madness of the Vietnam War. However, I recently read in an issue of Ben Hunt’s Epsilon Theory (and confirmed by Wikipedia) that it is based on Joseph Conrad’s 1914 novella, Heart of Darkness, set around Africa’s ivory trade. They share a darkness and a central character, Col. Kurtz. The plot of “Apocalypse Now” is Willard’s mission into Cambodia to assassinate Marlon Brando’s Kurtz, who had gone rogue, abandoned his command, established his own empire and was administering his own brand of justice over friend and foe, all to the embarrassment of the U.S. Army. Willard suffers from his own set of demons but is desperate for a mission to define himself and sets out to assassinate Kurtz. That leads to Coppola’s litany of violence, death, emptiness, hopelessness and madness that was the Vietnam War. Through their experiences, both Kurtz and Willard see clearly through the façade of the Vietnam experience. They realize it has no underlying reason or purpose. They both fully appreciate their own role in the war and come to know the heart of darkness and horror that was Vietnam in their own ways. But they react differently – Willard sticking with his mission and Kurtz abandoning his. There is emptiness and madness today, but the methods are different. Almost everyone – whether they are in medicine, finance, technology, banking, government or energy – express similar complaints of the futility of their mission because of regulations or inequities invoked by public officials. Honesty, integrity and transparency have always been in short supply, but events and façades erected since the Great Recession have made it more acceptable to intentionally mislead and alter facts, if not just outright lie.

Gary Smith is President and CEO of PowerSouth Energy Cooperative

44 JULY 2014

There is style but no substance, and leaders with words but no values. Lies are offered without conscience, regulation without reason and politics without policy. The ends, so long as they are mine, justify any means, regardless of the cost. Mass mediaspinned campaigns have replaced the truth. Leaders hold themselves above the law and regulation that governs the masses. We are encouraged to shirk our responsibilities and expect our neighbors or the government to pay our debts. We are taught that we are entitled to what others have earned. We are stripped of our dignity, our character, our honor and, more importantly, our self-worth. That is the hollow world we live in – a world not so different from Kurtz’s and Willard’s. The situation is cast in a line from “Apocalypse Now” when Kurtz and Willard first meet. Kurtz asks Willard why the Army wants to terminate his command: Willard: They told me you had gone totally insane and that your methods were unsound. Kurtz: Are my methods unsound? Willard: I don’t see any method at all, sir. Kurtz: I expected someone like you. What did you expect? Are you an assassin? Willard: I’m a soldier. Kurtz: You’re neither. You’re an errand boy, sent by grocery clerks to collect a debt. We are still led and governed by grocery clerks anxious to collect their debts, impart their rules and impose their values regardless of the cost. There are at times no methods, just agendas. Joseph Conrad wrote in Heart of Darkness, “It is my belief that no man ever understands quite his own artful dodges to escape from the grim shadow of self-knowledge. The question is not how to get cured, but how to live.” It is a hollow world, and it appears, at times, overwhelmingly hollow. There is little we can do to cure it. But it is important we understand it, come to terms with it, influence its direction the best we can, and learn how to live with it. Will we respond by staying with our mission like Willard or abandoning it and going rogue like Kurtz? I will end by quoting T.S. Elliot’s The Hollow Men, a commentary on the Heart of Darkness, “This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.” I hope you have a good month. A This article draws heavily on Ben Hunt’s Epsilon Theory as reprinted by John Mauldin in his April 2, 2014 newsletter, but the conclusions are mine.

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