A parable:

Harrington, Michael

A parable In desert societies-including the American Southwest-water is so precious that it is money. People connive and fight and die over it; governments covet it; marriages are even made and...

...There are some who are loath to leave behind the consolation of familiar brutalities...
...That is the social project...
...marriages are even made and broken because of it...
...It is also possible that we will seize this opportunity and make of the earth a homeland rather than an exile...
...Mankind has lived now for several millennia in the desert...
...For he knows, with an existential certitude, that it is human nature to fight over water...
...MICHAEL HARRINGTON Socialism (1970...
...If one were to talk to a person who has known only that desert and tell him that in the city there are public water fountains and that children are even sometimes allowed to turn on the fire hydrants in the summer and to frolic in the water, he would be sure one were crazy...
...It does not promise, or even seek, to abolish the human condition, for that is impossible...
...we do not dare to think that things could be otherwise...
...Our minds and emotions are conditioned by that bitter experience...
...It does propose to end that invidious competition and venality which, because scarcity allowed no other alternatives, we have come to think are inseparable from our humanity...
...It may even be possible that mankind cannot bear too much happiness...
...Yet there are signs that we are, without really having planned it that way, marching out of the desert...
...there are others who in one way or another would like to impose the law of the desert upon the Promised Land...

Vol. 116 • September 1989 • No. 15


 
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