Tuesday, 22 September 2015

Misery for entertainment

A RECENT tourist attraction in Britain has provided one of the most damning critiques of modern life you could ever hope for.
Dismaland was created, at least in part, by the guerilla artist, or vandal depending on your point of view, Banksy. The idea was to create a temporary artistic endeavour revelling in a dystopic version of a well known theme park. Even the four to five hour queues to get in have been suggested by some as part of the experience. One thing which seemed clear was that anyone trying to buy the tickets online were in for a depressing time as payment timed out before you could input details.
The more that people were told the exhibit was designed to be a miserable and depressing event the more they flocked to it.
The thing is that this fascination with misery for entertainment seems to have permeated throughout our entire social structure. The refugee crisis has become a reality show for some. People tuning in to wring their hands and preach while all the while detaching themselves from the reality of the situation.
It is one of the problems of a social media driven 24 hour news cycle. People are saturated by partial information and ever more explosive stories as news organisations fight for the crumbs to gain viewers. As part of this they have moved away from serious news and journalism to entertainment as they dumb down to capture the mindless masses. The viewing public have become the ultimate consumers of misery and human suffering demanding ever  more to satisfy their obscene appetites.
This same approach has encroached into politics, rarely the most pure of professions. As Donald Trump leads the pack to become the Republican party's Presidential nominee it has become clear that it is not because of his well defined policies or engaging personality.
Mr Trump is leading the way because he has tapped into the dissatisfaction of the masses. He has shifted blame to those who cannot defend themselves and away from those who may vote for him. It is a time honoured political approach which keeps working, and likewise being condemned afterwards when it inevitability increases feelings of hatred and bigotry.
While it would be great to hold Trump to account as the figurehead of the growing culture of misery entertainment he has not created it. It is something which had been rising slowly over the years and we haven't done anything to stop it. Instead we have all allowed ourselves to be dragged into its slurry of hate and recrimination.
The recent 75th anniversary of the Battle of Britain showed that this wasn't always the case. There was a time when people came together to fight back against what was wrong. A time when no matter how bad things were you focused on the possibilities, the solutions, you held onto hope and honour. A time when people valued bravery and courage, rather than condemning it as Mr Trump as done in various ways during his campaign.
The human race has not been built on hate or pain. Our humanity came about as we fought to tear these things down. We can no longer view the anguish of others as fuel for our insatiable need for misery. Instead it must stoke the fires of compassion and solidarity and drive us forward to a achieve so much more for the good of all.

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