Friday, January 23, 2009

Hopium: the Opiate of the People

("Hopium" is not original to me. I have borrowed it from John Kass, a columnist for the Chicago Tribune.)

Karl Marx once opined: "Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people."

Karl Marx was quite wrong. It isn't religion; it is "Hopium."

Hopium is what the Obama administration is selling the masses by the brick and in some cases, where there is financial hardship, giving it away for nothing. Hopium is the new opium of a reborn America.

Like any other drug, hopium is seductively addictive and provides users with feelings of euphoria in the midst of day-to-day drudgery. Hopium provides instant insight into a fantasy world where we arrive at "that day when black will not be asked to get in back, when brown can stick around ... when yellow will be mellow ... when the red man can get ahead, man; and when white will embrace what is right." (from Rev. Joseph Lowery's inaugural benediction)

Sadly, few care to see or recognize the true results of hopium dependency. However, one does not need a crystal ball or fortune teller or psychic hotline to see where a country addicted to hopium will end up.

Rather we need only to look to history, to the words of the Marquis de Sade in his play "Juliette." He said it much more eloquently that I ever could.

Though nature lavishes much upon your people, their circumstances are strait. But this is not the effect of their laziness; this general paralysis has its source in your policy which, from maintaining the people in dependence, shuts them out from wealth; their ills are thus rendered beyond remedy, and the political state is in a situation no less grave than the civil government, since it must seek its strength in its very weakness. Your apprehension, Ferdinand, lest someone discover the things I have been telling you leads you to exile arts and talents from your realm. You fear the powerful eye of genius, that is why you encourage ignorance. Tis opium you feed your people, so that, drugged, they do not feel their hurts, inflicted by you. And that is why where you reign no establishments are to be found giving great men to the homeland; the rewards due knowledge are unknown here, and as there is neither honor nor profit in being wise, nobody seeks after wisdom.

I have studied your civil laws, they are good, but poorly enforced, and as a result they sink into ever further decay. And the consequences thereof? A man prefers to live amidst their corruption rather than plead for their reform, because he fears, and with reason, that this reform will engender infinitely more abuses than it will do away with; things are left as they are. Nevertheless, everything goes askew and awry and as a career in government has no more attractions than one in the arts, nobody involves himself in public affairs; and for all this compensation is offered in the form of luxury, of frivolity, of entertainments. So it is that among you a taste for trivial things replaces a taste for great ones, that the time which ought to be devoted to the latter is frittered away on futilities, and that you will be subjegated sooner or later and again and again by any foe who bothers to make the effort.

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