Thanks to the
introduction of color printing in the newspaper business, our nation
has been divided into "blues"
and "reds." For the
uninitiated, "blues" represent
predominantly liberal states/counties that tend to vote for the
Democratic Party while "reds"
represent more conservative states/counties that tend to vote
Republican. The coastal states — especially those that are home to
the financial and media power centers of our country — are in the "blueblood"
category, whereas ordinary folk in the heartland take on the
role of good, old-fashioned "red-blooded"
Americans. While this construct serves the media beast, it fails to
capture the real BLUE versus RED
battle going on. This one is between the overwhelming majority of
people on earth who accept the perceived reality that is
memetically presented to them every minute of their lives and that
sliver of humanity who are Campbellian heroes embarking on the road
never before traveled.
In the movie,
The Matrix, this point was illustrated through the metaphorical
use of pills. The vast
majority of the world’s population had taken a blue
pill which allowed them to be content to live their formulaic
lives while an infinitesimal fraction had elected for a red
pill and were awakened to challenge the totality of the ill-perceived
existing world order. This latter group of Über-men and women,
though awakened to their full potentiality, were prepared to live
desolate lives as a messianic price for refusing to accept the
mundane.
Unfortunately,
most people have missed the point of The Matrix entirely. As
was made clear in the closing scenes of the third and final
installment of the trilogy, we are not to endlessly "fight"
for what we believe, rather, we are to confront that aspect in each of
us which perpetuates conflict — both with others and within
ourselves. It is only when we arrest the internal beast
that outward peace and true prosperity can manifest themselves. And
when a sliver of humanity grows into a critical mass dedicated to the
service of all — irrespective of perceived differences —
desolation becomes a thing of the past.
So, for
those of you who insist on fighting for one "-ism" to
prevail over another, I offer these words of advice from my late
(distant) cousin on the Lennon/Linnane side of the family:
"You
better free
your mind instead."
If you are
prepared to free your mind and "take the [metaphorical] red
pill," then I invite you to visit the web site of One
Humanity and to ask yourself: "Do I want to
read history or make
history?"
[*Within the same song, Revolution, John Lennon also said, "when
you talk about destruction, don’t you know that you can count me
out!"]