Saving Passengers ofthe Good Ship Titanic… Earth
Robert J. Burrowes, KalimNews, 14 April 2015: On 15 April 1912, the
Titanic, the largest ship afloat at
the time it entered service, sank in the North Atlantic Ocean after hitting an
iceberg on its maiden voyage. The large and unnecessary death toll – more than
1,500 passengers and crew – was the result of many factors.
Understanding the
psychology that underpins these factors teaches us why so many people died in
the Titanic disaster. This, in turn,gives
us insight into how we might be able to improve our chances of averting the
sinking of the Good Ship Earth and
losing most of its passengers in the years now immediately ahead.
Two key factors in
the sinking of the Titanic were the
ship’s design, including the limited number of watertight compartments in the
hull,and the ship’s speed at the time of the incident despite the risk of
hitting an iceberg (which could only be detected visually, rather than
technologically, in 1912).
Separately from
this,other factors in the huge death toll were the inadequate number of
lifeboats and the failures in telegraph communications – see ‘The ITU and the
Internet’s Titanic Moment’ http://journals.law.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/stanford-technology-law-review-stlr/online/ryan-theituandtheinternetstitanicmoment.pdf– which meant that the Californian, just five to ten miles away, did not respond to the
distress signals, although the Carpathia travelled
considerably further to arrive less than two hours after the Titanic foundered, thus saving over 700
lives.
Moreover, the decisions
to prioritise the access of wealthy passengers to the lifeboats (by locking many
‘lower deck’ passengers below), the decisions to launch many lifeboats before
they were full, and the decisions by virtually all lifeboat occupants to not
row the lifeboats the short distance back to rescue passengers stranded in the
water after the ship had sunk also significantly contributed to the unnecessarily
high death toll.
So what can we
learn from the sinking of the Titanic
and its huge death toll that can help us to avert sinking the Good Ship Earth and killing off most, if not all,
humans and many other species besides? Let me consider each item above in turn.
From a design
perspective, the Earth is without peer in the known Universe if life support is
the primary consideration. The Earth took more than four billion years to evolve
into the state it had reached by 1790. It was perfectly functional as a
life-support system for billions of species interacting in a phenomenal web of
life that nurtured not only species but each individual as well.
But then the industrial revolution, fuelled
by coal, oil and gas, starting adversely impacting on that life-support system,
although it wasn’t until the twentieth century that scientists worked this out.
Fortunately, we know now – see ‘Game Over for the Climate’ http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/10/opinion/game-over-for-the-climate.html–and there is still a little time left to take
the profound action necessary to halt and, in some key ways, reverse the design
alterations to the Earth that we have been making for the past 200 years. But
will we act?
Many people won’t act, particularly those people
whose fear works in the same way as most of those involved in the Titanic disaster. ‘Fear?’ you say. Yes,
fear.Or, more accurately, unconscious terror.
Why weren’t there more watertight
compartments in the hull of the Titanic?
Fear (of the cost). Why weren’t there more lifeboats? Fear (again, of the
cost). Many business decisions are based on fear although businesspeople have
developed a substantial language to obscure this fact (mainly from themselves):
emphasising the importance of ‘maximising short-term shareholder profits’ (at
the expense of socially or environmentally desirable outcomes) is an obvious
example.
Why was the Titanic travelling at high speed? Fear. In the conditions, the
speed was clearly foolish but the owner couldn’t feel this because it was
overshadowed by his focus on ‘showing off’ the ship’s speed and the ship’s
captain was too frightened to refuse the owner’s request for greater speed even
though he was well aware of the danger of hitting an iceberg.
What caused the failure in telegraph
communications? Fear (of losing their jobs). The Telefunken-employed radio
operators on the Californian, which
was just a few miles away, were not allowed to communicate with the
Marconi-employed radio operators on the Titanic.
Why did officers
prioritise the access of wealthy passengers to the lifeboats (by locking many
‘lower deck’ passengers below deck)? Fear (of disobeying orders and overloading
lifeboats).
Why were many
lifeboats launched before they were full? Fear (on the part of passengers
already in lifeboats who wanted to get away from the sinking ship quickly).
Why did virtually
all lifeboat occupants not row back the short distance necessary to rescue
passengers stranded in the water after the ship had sunk? Fear (of being
swamped and ending in the water themselves, although this could be easily
avoided).
Of course, most of
the time when people seek to explain dysfunctional human behaviour, they come
up with an explanation that is more palatable. But when I observe dysfunctional
human behaviour, I always see the fear, irrespective of other superficial
justifications that are offered.
And that is what I see when I observe elite
and most other responses to our current epidemic of violence whether in the
form of war, exploitation of countries in the global ‘South’, environmental
destruction, domestic violence or otherwise. I see their (unconscious) fear
lead them away from insightful analyses and visionary solutions because they
are compelled by their fear to live in delusion (which requires no action). See ‘Why Violence?’ http://tinyurl.com/whyviolence and ‘Fearless Psychology and Fearful Psychology:
Principles and Practice’ http://anitamckone.wordpress.com/articles-2/fearless-and-fearful-psychology/
So if you are like
those people on the one lifeboat on the Titanic
who returned to rescue passengers after the ship had submerged and you reckon
your fear hasn’t gotten the better of you, then I invite you to consider
participating in the fifteen-year strategy outlined in ‘The Flame Tree Project
to Save Life on Earth’ http://tinyurl.com/flametree and to consider joining those people in 81 countries
who have signed the online pledge of ‘The People’s Charter to Create a
Non-violent World’ http://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com
There is still just
enough time to save most of the passengers on the Good Ship Earth but we must be courageous and
resolute. If we let the cowardice and delusion of elites and their agents guide
us, we will join the dead passengers of the Titanic.
The columnist Robert J. Burrowes has a lifetime commitment to understanding and ending human violence. He has done extensive research since 1966 in an effort to understand why human beings are violent and has been a nonviolent activist since 1981. He is the author of 'Why Violence?'http://tinyurl.com/whyviolence His email address is flametree@riseup.net and his website is at http://robertjburrowes.wordpre ss.com
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