This is not a review of the film version of Daniel Keyes’s
award-winning Flowers for Algernon
(short story, 1958, novel 1966) with the spelling corrected. No, this is a brief commentary on a “game”
that seems to be gaining great popularity among teenagers and adolescents (and
you have no idea how old it makes you feel to say something like that).
You rang? |
It’s pretty basic.
You scribble “Yes” and “No” and a few other things on a piece of
notepaper, and balance a pen or pencil on another pen or pencil, and invoke “the
demon Charlie” by chanting his (its?) name.
You then get the answers to questions.
No one seems to have been dumb enough to use this method of
answering test questions. Most people
doing it seem aware that it’s kind of stupid, but “cool” to pretend, sort of
like the “Magic Eightball” that you shook and asked embarrassing questions
about your friends, e.g., in the
hearing of Archibald you ask the Eightball in a loud voice while shaking it, “Did
Archie run naked down Main Street last night chased by Betty and Veronica while
waving a screaming chicken?”, and laugh hysterically when the Eightball “answers”
“SIGNS
POINT TO YES.”
"Read this. You'll feel better." |
Ultimately, of course, you’d be better off watching the 1940
Three Stooges film, You Nazty Spy,
that inspired the “toy” or, better, reading an actual book from 1940 like
Fulton Sheen’s Freedom
Under God, or Mortimer Adler’s How
to Read a Book (updated 1972 with Charles Dornan) if you’re uncertain
how to go about the business, but it’s all harmless fun . . . right?
It’s all harmless fun — not right.
If there’s nothing in it, it’s a waste of time — and nobody
has as much of that as he or she thinks, and shouldn’t be wasting it.
Here’s a fun fact.
Ask most people how many days they think the average lifespan is. Most people will answer 100,000. Do the math.
Living 100,000 days would make you more than 270 years old. The average lifespan in days, assuming the
Biblical three score and ten (i.e.,
70), is more like 25,000 days. Do you really want to waste any of them asking
an Eightball or a balanced pencil what you should be doing?
What if there is
something in it, and you really are
summoning up a demon from Hell to give you answers to a bunch of really stupid
questions?
Nothing serious or anything. |
Traditionally, demons don’t do this sort of thing for
free. Having no use for Bitcoins or any
other funnymoney (such as the debt-backed Euro or U.S. Dollar), they have a
tendency to take your soul. In exchange
for the rather dubious pleasure of temporarily embarrassing your friends, you
gained an eternity in Hell.
And you don’t even know if the answers are right even if you’re
serious. The Devil — the chief of demons
— is also known as “the Father of Lies.”
You just tossed away your soul for something that isn’t even true. At least in the stories people selling their
souls got a little something for it.
None of this, however, answers why this so-called game is so
popular, or what to do about it.
The fact is that this stuff always comes in spurts during
times of social stress and change. There
was rapid growth of “spiritism” during and after the American Civil War, and
another surge in the 1890s when to all intents and purposes the “free” land
under the Homestead Act ran out and more people began being forced into the
wage system — and the Ouija Board was “officially” invented.
"Will I ever get out of Hell?" |
Another big surge came after World War I, and again after
World War II. The Magic Eightball was
invented in the 1950s by someone who had been influenced by “automatic writing”
through a Ouija Board, and embodied it in a children’s game.
It didn’t start with the Ouija Board, though. The technique of “spirit” or “automatic” writing has been used for about a thousand years at least. Madame Blavatsky used it (allegedly) to compose her two theosophical treatises, The Veil of Isis and The Secret Doctrine. (Some authorities claim that her spirit guides didn’t actually dictate the books, as there are indications of possible plagiarism from other esoteric tomes, but maybe the spirit guides got their wires crossed.)
It didn’t start with the Ouija Board, though. The technique of “spirit” or “automatic” writing has been used for about a thousand years at least. Madame Blavatsky used it (allegedly) to compose her two theosophical treatises, The Veil of Isis and The Secret Doctrine. (Some authorities claim that her spirit guides didn’t actually dictate the books, as there are indications of possible plagiarism from other esoteric tomes, but maybe the spirit guides got their wires crossed.)
Madame Blavatsky |
Around 1900 the Ouija Board was marketed as a game for
children. It was repackaged in the late 1960s
as “Ka-Bala: The Mysterious Game that Tells the Future” and seems to have
enjoyed good sales, catching the wave on the whole “New Age” schtick.
Many people are unaware that Fabian socialism, the root of E.F. Schumacher’s Small is Beautiful (1973) and A Guide for the Perplexed (1977) books, both “esoteric” or “New Age” pieces, is a combination of Madame Blavatsky’s theosophy and an expanded georgist socialism. Nor is it particularly well-known that the social and economic thought of Msgr. John A. Ryan, the popular “social justice” guru, was heavily influenced by the socialist-populist politician Ignatius Loyola Donnelly (at least according to Msgr. Ryan’s statement).
Many people are unaware that Fabian socialism, the root of E.F. Schumacher’s Small is Beautiful (1973) and A Guide for the Perplexed (1977) books, both “esoteric” or “New Age” pieces, is a combination of Madame Blavatsky’s theosophy and an expanded georgist socialism. Nor is it particularly well-known that the social and economic thought of Msgr. John A. Ryan, the popular “social justice” guru, was heavily influenced by the socialist-populist politician Ignatius Loyola Donnelly (at least according to Msgr. Ryan’s statement).
Ignatius Donnelly |
Donnelly was born a Catholic but turned spiritualist. Madame Blavatsky used Donnelly as a primary
source in her second book, The Secret
Doctrine, in the section dealing with the sinking of Atlantis.
What can be done about this sort of thing?
You could forbid people to mess around with it. Of course, that would virtually ensure its
continued popularity.
Or you could address what is probably at the root of many
people’s interest in the occult: a feeling of powerlessness.
You know what’s coming.
“Power,” as Daniel Webster said, “naturally and necessarily follows
property.” If you want to get people to
stop asking demons and spirit guides for advice, the obvious thing to do is to
empower them through direct ownership of capital to take control over their own
lives.
This requires an aggressive program of expanded capital
ownership, such as Capital
Homesteading, that has the potential to empower every child, woman, and man
through direct ownership of capital.
It beats balancing a pencil and asking “Charlie” to tell you
what to do.
#30#