kenpo tiger
Senior Master
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2004
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Gee whiz Robert. I had written all kinds of things about McCarthyism and deleted it. Scary when you and I are on the same wavelength, if on different coasts and in different time zones. I started getting a bit worried when you stated so baldly that you and I know more than the rest do, etc., but I realized you were, of course, making a point, which became clearer in the next few paragraphs. And yes, it scares me to be around a group of martial artists to whom it's so very cool to be able to inflict all sorts of pain on someone *because you can*. Lately I've been accused -- no, it's been pointed out to me that I'm not overly aggressive with kenpo which can be a highly aggressive martial art once that particular line is crossed by the opponent/attacker. I've considered why that is the case and have come up with a partial answer: omitting all that about my being a woman, not wanting to hurt my training partners (been there, had it done to me) and so on, what it comes down to, in the final analysis, is my education and upbringing.rmcrobertson said:In the first place, if you go through various forums and threads on martial talk, you will see all sorts of glorifications of violence: advertisements for various cruel little toys for boys, joyful announcements of having found this really kewl way to break a neck, swaggering about fighting prowess and about having hurt some guy last night, hoots about how neato it would be if we just blew up more human beings, and on and on and on. Often, this crap--which is understandable in teenagers, and less and less acceptable in grown-ups--is presented anonymously, or coupled with fundamentalist Protestant ideology (sorry, but I haven't seen a lot of Buddhist, Muslim, Hindu, Catholic or Epsicopalian ranting about sending unbelievers to hell), with extreme nationalism, with homophobias.
I find this stuff far more offensive than anything a college professor might have said in a public forum, where he was invited to speak because of his controversial views and where the audience had the right to protest, to complain, to ask questions.
As for the changes in American society, the first point I'd make is that the commonest justification for violence on these forums is that Things Have Gotten Worse and This Country Is Going To the (Godless) Dogs. So, guys and gals, that means that folks like me and KT grew up and were educated in a better, more moral, more decent America. It means we know more than you, and are more moral than you--and since that's a ridiculous argument, perhaps you oughta think through the next claim about how much this country has slid downhill.
I took the "Almighty Dollar," from H.L. Mencken, of course, who was pissed about the trend in the 1920s and 1930. So, it's been with us a while. However, things really took off around Reagan's second term, in all sorts of ways. The work-week's longer, real wages have dropped, education is harder for working class people to access, etc. etc., etc.--and to really put the cherry on, anybody who even slightly questions the Way Things Are draws attacks (personal, as well as ideological and intellectual) that I've only read about....because I was a kid when Senator Joe McCarthy was running around loose.
And that's what a lot of this stuff is--McCarthyism. It's red-baiting, or whatever the, "new," terms are. How do I know this? First, because the language is exactly the same. For that matter, it's the same as a century ago, when groups like the AFL were getting called unpatriotic Commies up and down the land.
Second, it's McCarthyism because the hallmark of McCarthyism is ignorance. Just a minor question: how many of you guys actually tracked down exactly what Churchill said before you started yelling about it? Did you look up his writings, his books, his record? Or did you just take a coupla sound bites off the TV, a bit o'this and a bit o'that from O'Reilly or Savage, and launch?
Yeah, that's what I thought. And the fact of the matter is, it doesn't surprise me at all: it's one of the classical intellectual effects and products of advanced capitalism, where knowledge is always presented fast, in little bits, divorced from material reality and identified as purified technology of one kind or another.
I'm not surprised either, because this stuff is endemic in the martial arts--always with the latest and the kewlest, always with the short-cuts, always with the divorce of one's technical proficiency from the simplest moral developments, always with the chortling about hurting other people.
It's at that point that you might consider the extent to which Funakoshi's remarks about the point of the arts being the improvement of character, together with Marx's, "The point, however, is not to understand the world, but to change it." But then, these guys are dead, and the books take a long time to read and think about, and anyway Marx killed millions....
You wanna criticize Churchill? Great. Find out what he actually said, and go git 'im. Then, think about this--did it ever occur to you that the REAL criticism is that when college profs say this stuff, it has no effect on reality whatsoever, that it's just more hot air from the privileged, that you're pissed because your society is trying to erase the whole world of literature, the arts, and ideas from your lives, replacing everything with football, the swimsuit issue, and the, "ideas," of shows like "Crossfire?"
I dislike bullies, whether they're oratorical or physical bullies. Our generation was the peace, love, and understanding (c'mon people now, smile on your brother, everybody get together, try to love one another right now) group. Where have the majority of us disappeared to? Those of us in the martial arts are still pacifists (interesting that fist appears in that word, isn't it...) who are training in the martial arts for the more spiritual as well as the physical. I'm not the next Million Dollar Baby, kids. I'm not getting into the ring with anyone for the sake of glory and a trophy. Why? It's not who I am nor is it who I want to be as a martial artist.
Dan, you asked if it was the context within which I grew up. The answer is, resoundingly, yes -- and I believe it goes for Robert as well, if his post is any indication.
We all have our points of view regarding what's good and right and moral. Those points of view become skewed toward what society becomes. Robert and I grew up in a time of great turmoil and change in this country, when many people were just beginning to speak out (and getting assassinated for their trouble) with radically different ideas -- ideas which ultimately changed our society. I'd like to think most was for the better. I also think that Robert and I have led (and still lead) lives which are vastly different from many of those led by people here, as we do have a geographic commonality to our formative years. That we both work in environments which are highly tolerant of and encourage radically different ideas and concepts is a common denominator as well. Perhaps that's a window into what goes on in our minds when freedom of speech, academic freedom, and freedom in the arts comes under fire. Doesn't make it - or us - better, or more moral, Robert. Just different.
Of course, *one* cannot generalize about martial artists as a group. We're like any other -- with radicals and conservatives in our midst. That's part of why kenpo is so fragmented with so many different variations and such virulent politically-based arguments about which is the *correct* one occur. I recently met quite a few masters and other high-ranking kenpoists when I went to visit Mr. Parker at a camp held at Master Sean Kelley's school in Florida, all of whom practice varying styles of kenpo. I refused to engage in a political discussion about the Tracys with someone, mainly because I wanted to discuss kenpo. It is fascinating to see how much in common we all have when we let politics fall by the wayside.
All this goes to the basic premise of this thread, which is that the free exchange of ideas is paramount in a free society.