As we witness the
most powerful naval fleet in history move toward the entry onto the Persian
Gulf to potentially obliterate Iran, we are faced with a chilling "banality
of violence." While millions face destruction and Palestine endures
unprecedented deprivation, our media remains obsessed with the faulty
toilets on the USS Gerald R. Ford. We have become a population that finds more
interest in the plumbing of the aggressor than the humanity of the victim
What we describe as
civilization has become a thin veneer for a global decline into immorality. For
centuries, we have mistaken the "balance of power" for peace,
allowing mightier nations to use their strength to subjugate the weak for
resources and markets. This systemic decay has reached a horrific zenith:
today, the most powerful naval force in history—the U.S. Gerald R.
Ford strike group—moves with clinical precision to potentially obliterate another
nation. Yet, the world's media is not discussing the
morality of mass murder. Instead, it is obsessed with the faulty toilets
on the warship.
This is the banality of violence: the
conversion of a machine of "obliteration" into a viral joke about a
"shithouse." While we laugh at the clogged pipes of an $13
billion armada, we remain silent about the millions of lives it is poised to
extinguish. We have become so inured to the deprivation in
Palestine and the impending "first sin" of killing that we find
more interest in the plumbing of the aggressor than the humanity of the victim.
The Epstein
papers further reveal the depth of this rot, showing how a "moral
elite"—including figures like Noam Chomsky and Deepak
Chopra—can be captured and compromised by those with no restraints on
their depravity. We are forced to ask: Are we a lost species?
The answer is no, but
the way forward requires a radical shift in how we define our existence. In his
latest work, Irreducible (2024), Federico
Faggin provides the scientific key to our survival. He argues that we are
not biological machines, but quantum beings whose consciousness is
irreducible and inextricably connected via a universal field. To Faggin, any
act of violence is an act against the self because it ignores the fundamental quantum
entanglement of all life—man, beast, and trees.
This scientific
singularity provides the modern foundation for Mahatma
Gandhi’s Satyagraha (Truth-Force), Ahimsa (Non-violence) and
Swaraj. Gandhi understood that if humanity is truly singular, then violence is
an illogical attempt to solve a problem by attacking one's own body. Satyagraha
(Truth-Force) explains that if you use violence to defeat an oppressor, you
just become a new kind of oppressor. Truth (satya), is the weapon to defeat the
oppressor. During the 1930 Salt March, he didn't use weapons; he used
the truth that the British salt tax was an immoral
"plunder" of a basic human right.
Ahimsa (non-violence), Gandhi taught,
is the greatest force at the disposal of mankind. If we are all part of a
singular humanity, then killing is a "suicidal act" that
destroys the soul of the killer as much as the body of the victim.
Self-Rule
(Swaraj): Gandhi’s ultimate goal was "Swaraj," which
means self-governance. He argued that if you cannot control your own
impulses toward greed and violence, you will always be a slave to an empire or
an oligarch. Self-governance was what was absent in those named in the Epstein
papers.
These very human
principles show that we are not so depraved as a species as to not understand
where we failed, nor so lost as to be without a map. By replacing the
"balance of power" with a balance of consciousness, we reclaim
our humanity from the oligarchs. We are the universe’s power; our evolution
lies in the willingness to finally recognize that there is no
"other."
In Malaysia as we are in the process
of reviewing the trajectories of education, those involved in the process may
want to consider adding a new subject on humanity based on the above at all
levels of education.

